4.2 Article

Rainforest conversion to smallholder cash crops leads to varying declines of beetles (Coleoptera) on Sumatra

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BIOTROPICA
卷 55, 期 1, 页码 119-131

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/btp.13165

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agroforestry; beta diversity partitioning; jungle rubber; latent variable model; monoculture; oil palm; rainforest; rubber; smallholder; Southeast Asia; weevils

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Southeast Asian arthropod biodiversity is declining rapidly, and this study provides evidence that the negative responses of beetles to tropical land-use change vary among families, with the density and diversity of beetles in rainforests likely being more severely affected than previously reported.
Southeast Asian arthropod biodiversity is in rapid decline, but the variability of responses within taxa has received little attention. Using canopy fogging, we collected similar to 50,000 beetles (Coleoptera) in (1) lowland rainforest, (2) jungle rubber (rubber agroforest), and smallholder monoculture plantations of (3) rubber and (4) oil palm in Sumatra, across two landscapes and seasons. On average, beetle abundance was more than 50%, and biomass over 75%, lower in rubber and oil palm plantations than in rainforest and jungle rubber. This pattern was influenced by landscape and season. Abundance and biomass declines were similar in Chrysomelidae, Elateridae, and Staphylinidae, but differed in Curculionidae, which were most abundant in oil palm due to the introduced oil palm pollinator Elaeidobius kamerunicus. Across beetle families, species richness in monocultures was reduced by at least 70% compared to rainforest, with beetle richness in jungle rubber being similar to rainforest. Community composition in oil palm plantations differed markedly from the other land-use systems for Chrysomelidae and Curculionidae, but less for Elateridae and Staphylinidae. Turnover contributed more to overall beta diversity than nestedness for all families and land-use systems. Likely undersampling of the beetle community in rainforest suggests that declines of beetle density and diversity are much more severe than reported here, especially for beetle families with many concealed species, such as Staphylinidae. This study provides first evidence that negative responses of beetles to tropical land-use change vary among families, and is the first report of its kind from heavily understudied Sumatra. Abstract in Indonesia is available with online material.

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