4.0 Article

Maintaining diversity through intermediate disturbances: evidence from rodents colonizing rehabilitating coastal dunes

Journal

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 286-294

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2028.2000.00254.x

Keywords

disturbance; diversity; forests; rehabilitation; rodents

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Rodents inhabit the coastal dune forests of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Here habitat rehabilitation following mining of dunes has resulted in coastal dune forest succession similar to that recorded in nonmined forests. We investigated the colonization of rehabilitating stands and evaluate the role of disturbance in maintaining rodent diversity. A trapping programme was established between July 1993 and February 1995 during which rodent colonization, local extinction and species richness were recorded for rehabilitating stands of different ages. Trends in these variables were closely associated with one of three possible outcomes for a disturbed patch over time, with no intervening disturbances following the initial disturbance. Colonization was initially high which led to an increase in species richness. Extinction was lower than colonization, but became higher when the habitat was 3 years old, which led to a decline in richness. We extrapolate this result assuming negligibly small disturbances after the initiation of rehabilitation and suggest that intermediate levels of disturbance maintain rodent species richness in coastal dune forests. Furthermore, our results illustrated species turnover, a prediction of the recorded outcome, with young stands dominated by Mastomys natalensis and older stands by Saccostomus campestris or Aethomys chrysophilus.

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