4.5 Article

Structure of Microhabitats Used by Microcebus rufus Across a Heterogeneous Landscape

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 5, Pages 682-700

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10764-021-00224-4

Keywords

Conservation; Habitat; Madagascar; Mouse lemurs; Primates; Tropical forests; Vegetation analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Rufford Small Grant for Nature Conservation [24419-1]
  2. Idea Wild

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The study found that the rufous mouse lemur prefers microhabitats with high density of small to medium-sized trees/shrubs in primary forests, and with high density of small plants and one liana in other forest types. Additionally, secondary forests and forest fragments had significantly lower tree/shrub density. This variation in microhabitat use may provide opportunities for the lemurs to live in disturbed habitats, but also expose them to additional threats that could affect their long-term survival.
Microhabitat preference among primates, which provides them with the niche they need to survive, often conditions primate diversity, abundance, and coexistence. Vegetation alteration and recovery have built heterogeneous forest landscapes that may influence primates' microhabitat preferences. We compared the diversity and size of trees/shrubs and the presence of lianas in 132 sites where we captured the rufous mouse lemur (Microcebus rufus), with that of 240 sites where we did not capture this species, to investigate the aspects of microhabitat structure they might prefer. We then examined how this structural preference varies across a heterogeneous landscape of forests with different disturbance levels. Overall, microhabitats used by M. rufus differed significantly from unused ones in densities of small size, understory, and midstory plants. Microcebus rufus frequented microhabitats with significantly denser small- and medium-size (diameter at breast height [DBH] 2.5-10 cm) trees/shrubs without lianas in the primary forest, and small-size plants (DBH 2.5-4.9 cm) with one liana in other forest types. Compared to the microhabitats they used in the primary forest, the microhabitats in other forest types had lower densities of trees/shrubs with lianas. Additionally, the secondary forests and forest fragments also had significantly lower DBH. Although this variation in microhabitat use may represent an opportunity for M. rufus to live in disturbed habitats, it may expose them to additional threats, affecting their long-term survival. These findings emphasize the need to examine potential changes in microhabitat use among primates living in anthropogenic landscapes, which could help optimize long-term conservation and management of threatened primate species in heterogeneous landscapes.

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