4.7 Article

Effects of human-modified landscapes on taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic dimensions of bat biodiversity

Journal

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 523-533

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12277

Keywords

Chiroptera; Costa Rica; fragmentation; functional diversity; phylogenetic diversity; taxonomic diversity

Funding

  1. Student Research Scholarship (Bat Conservation International)
  2. Organization for Tropical Studies
  3. American Society of Mammalogists
  4. Center for Environmental Sciences and Engineering at the University of Connecticut (UCONN)
  5. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Connecticut (UCONN)
  6. Center for Conservation and Biodiversity at the University of Connecticut (UCONN)
  7. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NX10AP49H]
  8. Graduate School at UCONN
  9. National Science Foundation [DEB-1050680]

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AimTo identify characteristics of a human-modified landscape that promote taxonomic (TD), functional (FD) and phylogenetic (PD) dimensions of bat biodiversity. LocationCaribbean lowlands of northeastern Costa Rica. MethodsDuring the dry and wet seasons, we quantified TD (Simpson's diversity), as well as FD and PD (Rao's quadratic entropy) of phyllostomid bat assemblages at 15 sites that represented a forest loss and fragmentation gradient. FD was estimated separately for each of seven functional components that reflect particular niche axes (e.g. diet, foraging strategy) and for all functional components combined (FDall). PD was based on relatedness of species derived from a supertree. We identified the best explanatory landscape characteristics of each dimension using hierarchical partitioning. ResultsLandscape effects were dimension and season specific. During the dry season, TD and PD increased with increasing proportions of pasture or size of forest patches, whereas FDall decreased with increasing size of forest patches. During the wet season, TD increased with increasing forest patch size, whereas FDall and PD increased with increasing compactness of forest patches and decreasing proximity. Decomposition of FD into separate functional components revealed different landscape effects on ecological aspects of assemblages. Main conclusionsOne dimension of biodiversity was not a good surrogate for another. Rather, decomposition of biodiversity into different dimensions and functional components facilitated identification of the aspects of assemblages that are most affected by forest conversion and fragmentation. Areas with intermediate amounts of forest and pasture during the dry season harboured highest diversity from taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic perspectives. During the wet season, areas with large, compact forest patches promoted the dimensions of biodiversity. Placement of areas with even amounts of forest and pasture adjacent to large, compact forest patches (e.g. reserves) may maintain high biodiversity of bats and the ecosystem functions that they provide throughout the year.

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