Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Planet Madagascar, Ontario, Guelph, Canada.
Am J Primatol. 2020 Apr;82(4):e23110. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23110. Epub 2020 Feb 21.
Studies on the impact of habitat loss on species occurrence consistently find that the amount of habitat (measured as patch area) is a major determinant of species occurrence at a patch-level. However, patch-level research may fail to detect important patterns and processes only observable at a landscape-level. A landscape-level approach that incorporates species-specific scale responses is needed to better understand what drives species occurrence. Our aim was to determine the landscape-level scale of effect of habitat amount on the occurrence of three species of nocturnal lemurs (Cheirogaleus medius, Microcebus murinus, and M. ravelobensis). We surveyed line transects to determine the occurrence of three lemur species within a fragmented landscape of deciduous dry forest and anthropogenic grassland in northwestern Madagascar. To determine the scale of effect of habitat loss on lemur occurrence, we compared logistic regression models of occurrence against habitat amount among eight different landscape scales using Akaike's Information Criterion values. We found differing scale responses among the lemurs in our study. Occurrence of C. medius responded to habitat amount at scales between 0.5-4 ha, M. murinus at scales between 1 and 4 ha and M. ravelobensis at scales between 0.125 and 4 ha. We suggest that the scale of effect for C. medius is mediated by their ability to hibernate. A relatively lower scale-response for Microcebus spp. likely reflect their omnivorous diet, small habitat requirements, and limited dispersal ability. Differences in scale responses between M. murinus and M. ravelobensis are likely a result of differing dispersal ability and responses to edge effects between these species. Our study is among the first on lemurs to show the value of a landscape-level approach when assessing the effects of habitat loss on species occurrence.
研究表明,生境丧失对物种出现的影响一致发现,生境数量(以斑块面积衡量)是物种在斑块水平出现的主要决定因素。然而,斑块水平的研究可能无法检测到仅在景观水平才能观察到的重要模式和过程。需要采用一种包含物种特定尺度响应的景观水平方法,以更好地理解是什么驱动了物种的出现。我们的目的是确定生境数量对三种夜间狐猴(Cheirogaleus medius、Microcebus murinus 和 M. ravelobensis)出现的景观水平影响尺度。我们调查了线样带,以确定三种狐猴物种在马达加斯加西北部落叶干燥森林和人为草地的破碎景观中的出现情况。为了确定生境丧失对狐猴出现的影响尺度,我们使用赤池信息量准则值比较了八种不同景观尺度下出现与生境数量的逻辑回归模型。我们发现,在我们的研究中,三种狐猴的响应尺度不同。C. medius 的出现对 0.5-4 公顷之间的生境数量有反应,M. murinus 对 1-4 公顷之间的生境数量有反应,M. ravelobensis 对 0.125-4 公顷之间的生境数量有反应。我们认为,C. medius 的影响尺度是由它们冬眠的能力决定的。Microcebus spp. 的相对较低的尺度响应可能反映了它们杂食性的饮食、较小的生境需求和有限的扩散能力。M. murinus 和 M. ravelobensis 之间的尺度响应差异可能是由于这两个物种的扩散能力和对边缘效应的反应不同造成的。我们的研究是首次在评估生境丧失对物种出现的影响时,展示景观水平方法的价值的狐猴研究之一。