Salazar Daniela A, Fontúrbel Francisco E
Departamento de Ciencias Ecológicas, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Instituto de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Valparaíso, Chile.
Integr Zool. 2016 Sep;11(5):413-21. doi: 10.1111/1749-4877.12198.
Habitat structure determines species occurrence and behavior. However, human activities are altering natural habitat structure, potentially hampering native species due to the loss of nesting cavities, shelter or movement pathways. The South American temperate rainforest is experiencing an accelerated loss and degradation, compromising the persistence of many native species, and particularly of the monito del monte (Dromiciops gliroides Thomas, 1894), an arboreal marsupial that plays a key role as seed disperser. Aiming to compare 2 contrasting habitats (a native forest and a transformed habitat composed of abandoned Eucalyptus plantations and native understory vegetation), we assessed D. gliroides' occurrence using camera traps and measured several structural features (e.g. shrub and bamboo cover, deadwood presence, moss abundance) at 100 camera locations. Complementarily, we used radio telemetry to assess its spatial ecology, aiming to depict a more complete scenario. Moss abundance was the only significant variable explaining D. gliroides occurrence between habitats, and no structural variable explained its occurrence at the transformed habitat. There were no differences in home range, core area or inter-individual overlapping. In the transformed habitats, tracked individuals used native and Eucalyptus-associated vegetation types according to their abundance. Diurnal locations (and, hence, nesting sites) were located exclusively in native vegetation. The landscape heterogeneity resulting from the vicinity of native and Eucalyptus-associated vegetation likely explains D. gliroides occurrence better than the habitat structure itself, as it may be use Eucalyptus-associated vegetation for feeding purposes but depend on native vegetation for nesting.
栖息地结构决定了物种的出现和行为。然而,人类活动正在改变自然栖息地结构,由于筑巢洞穴、庇护所或移动路径的丧失,这可能会对本地物种造成阻碍。南美洲温带雨林正在加速丧失和退化,危及许多本地物种的生存,尤其是山袋貂(Dromiciops gliroides Thomas,1894),一种作为种子传播者发挥关键作用的树栖有袋动物。为了比较两种截然不同的栖息地(原生森林和由废弃桉树林和原生林下植被组成的改造栖息地),我们使用相机陷阱评估了山袋貂的出现情况,并在100个相机位置测量了几个结构特征(如灌木和竹子覆盖度、枯木存在情况、苔藓丰度)。作为补充,我们使用无线电遥测技术评估其空间生态学,旨在描绘一个更完整的情况。苔藓丰度是解释不同栖息地中山袋貂出现情况的唯一显著变量,没有任何结构变量能解释其在改造栖息地中的出现情况。家域、核心区域或个体间重叠没有差异。在改造栖息地中,被追踪的个体根据本地植被和与桉树相关的植被类型的丰富程度来利用它们。白天的活动地点(也就是筑巢地点)完全位于原生植被中。原生植被和与桉树相关的植被相邻所产生的景观异质性可能比栖息地结构本身更能解释山袋貂的出现情况,因为它可能利用与桉树相关的植被觅食,但依赖原生植被筑巢。