Püttker Thomas, Pardini Renata, Meyer-Lucht Yvonne, Sommer Simone
Leibniz-Institute for Zoo- and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str, 17, D-10315 Berlin, Germany.
BMC Ecol. 2008 May 5;8:9. doi: 10.1186/1472-6785-8-9.
The Brazilian Atlantic Forest is highly endangered and only about 7% of the original forest remains, most of which consists of fragments of secondary forest. Small mammals in the Atlantic Forest have differential responses to this process of fragmentation and conversion of forest into anthropogenic habitats, and have varying abilities to occupy the surrounding altered habitats. We investigated the influence of vegetation structure on the micro-scale distribution of five small mammal species in six secondary forest remnants in a landscape of fragmented Atlantic Forest. We tested whether the occurrence of small mammal species is influenced by vegetation structure, aiming to ascertain whether species with different degrees of vulnerability to forest fragmentation (not vulnerable: A. montensis, O. nigripes and G. microtarsus; vulnerable: M. incanus and D. sublineatus; classification of vulnerability was based on the results of previous studies) are associated with distinct vegetation characteristics.
Although vegetation structure differed among fragments, micro-scale distribution of most of the species was influenced by vegetation structure in a similar way in different fragments. Among the three species that were previously shown not to be vulnerable to forest fragmentation, A. montensis and G. microtarsus were present at locations with an open canopy and the occurrence of O. nigripes was associated to a low canopy and a dense understory. On the other hand, from the two species that were shown to be vulnerable to fragmentation, M. incanus was captured most often at locations with a closed canopy while the distribution of D. sublineatus was not clearly influenced by micro-scale variation in vegetation structure.
Results indicate the importance of micro-scale variation in vegetation structure for the distribution of small mammal species in secondary forest fragments. Species that are not vulnerable to fragmentation occurred at locations with vegetation characteristics of more disturbed forest, while one of the species vulnerable to fragmentation was found at locations with older forest characteristics. Results suggest that micro-habitat preferences may be an important factor influencing the capacity of small mammals to occupy altered habitats and, consequently, their vulnerability to forest fragmentation at a larger spatial scale.
巴西大西洋森林面临高度濒危,仅约7%的原始森林留存,其中大部分为次生林片段。大西洋森林中的小型哺乳动物对森林破碎化及森林向人为栖息地转变的过程有不同反应,且占据周边改变后栖息地的能力各异。我们调查了植被结构对大西洋森林破碎化景观中六个次生林残留地五种小型哺乳动物物种微观尺度分布的影响。我们测试了小型哺乳动物物种的出现是否受植被结构影响,旨在确定对森林破碎化具有不同脆弱程度的物种(不易受影响:山地稻鼠、黑爪鼠和小跗侏鼠;易受影响:灰稻鼠和细纹稻鼠;脆弱性分类基于先前研究结果)是否与不同的植被特征相关。
尽管各片段间植被结构不同,但大多数物种的微观尺度分布在不同片段中受植被结构影响的方式相似。在先前显示对森林破碎化不易受影响的三个物种中,山地稻鼠和小跗侏鼠出现在树冠开阔的地点,黑爪鼠的出现与低树冠和茂密林下植被有关。另一方面,在显示易受破碎化影响的两个物种中,灰稻鼠最常被捕获于树冠封闭的地点,而细纹稻鼠的分布未明显受植被结构微观尺度变化的影响。
结果表明植被结构的微观尺度变化对次生林片段中小型哺乳动物物种分布的重要性。不易受破碎化影响的物种出现在具有更多受干扰森林植被特征的地点,而其中一个易受破碎化影响的物种出现在具有老龄森林特征的地点。结果表明微生境偏好可能是影响小型哺乳动物占据改变后栖息地能力的重要因素,进而影响它们在更大空间尺度上对森林破碎化的脆弱性。