Department of Environmental Technology and Management, Faculty of Environment, Kasetsart University, 50 Ngamwongwan Road, Jatujak District, Bangkok, 10900, Thailand.
Theoretical Ecology, University of Regensburg, Universitätsstraße 31, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2019 Jul 10;9(1):10015. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-46399-y.
Recent studies have suggested that defaunation of large-bodied frugivores reduces above-ground carbon storage in tropical forests of South America and Africa, but not, or less so, in Southeast Asian tropical forests. Here we analyze the issue using the seed dispersal network (data of interaction between trees and animal seed dispersers) and forest composition of a 30-ha forest dynamics plot in central Thailand, where an intact fauna of primates, ungulates, bears and birds of all sizes still exists. We simulate the effect of two defaunation scenarios on forest biomass: 1) only primates extirpated (a realistic possibility in near future), and 2) extirpation of all large-bodied frugivores (LBF) including gibbons, macaques, hornbills and terrestrial mammals, the main targets of poachers in this region. For each scenario, we varied the population size reduction of the LBF dispersed tree species from 20% to 100%. We find that tree species dependent on seed dispersal by large-bodied frugivores (LBF) account for nearly one-third of the total carbon biomass on the plot, and that the community turnover following a complete defaunation would result in a carbon reduction of 2.4% to 3.0%, depending on the defaunation scenario and the model assumptions. The reduction was always greater than 1% when the defaunation intensity was at least 40%. These effect sizes are comparable to values reported for Neotropical forests, suggesting that the impact of defaunation on carbon deficit is not necessarily lower in Southeast Asian forests. The problem of defaunation in Asia, and the mutual benefits between biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation, should therefore not be neglected by global policies to reduce carbon emissions.
最近的研究表明,大型食果动物的灭绝减少了南美的和非洲的热带森林的地上碳储量,但在东南亚的热带森林中则不然,或者影响较小。在这里,我们使用种子传播网络(树木和动物种子传播者之间相互作用的数据)和泰国中部一个 30 公顷森林动态样地的森林组成来分析这个问题,那里仍然存在完整的灵长类动物、有蹄类动物、熊和各种大小的鸟类动物群。我们模拟了两种灭绝情景对森林生物量的影响:1)仅消灭灵长类动物(在不久的将来很有可能发生),2)消灭所有大型食果动物(包括长臂猿、猕猴、犀鸟和陆生哺乳动物,这是该地区偷猎者的主要目标)。对于每种情景,我们将依赖大型食果动物传播的树种的种群大小减少从 20%到 100%。我们发现,依赖大型食果动物(LBF)传播种子的树种占该样地总碳生物量的近三分之一,而且完全灭绝后群落的更替将导致碳减少 2.4%至 3.0%,具体取决于灭绝情景和模型假设。当灭绝强度至少为 40%时,减少量总是大于 1%。这些效应大小与报道的新热带森林的值相当,表明在亚洲,食果动物灭绝对碳亏缺的影响不一定较低。因此,全球减少碳排放的政策不应忽视亚洲的动物灭绝问题,以及生物多样性保护和缓解气候变化之间的互利关系。