School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
Negaunee Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Jun;26(6):3285-3293. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15038. Epub 2020 Apr 2.
Tropical forest disturbance is a key driver of global biodiversity decline. On continents, the effects of logging are greatest on endemic species, presumably because disturbance is more likely to cover narrower distributions (the "cookie cutter" model). Islands hold disproportionate biodiversity, and are subject to accelerating biotic homogenization, where specialist endemics are lost while generalists persist. We tested responses of tropical island mammals to logging at multiple spatial scales, using a long-term experimental test in a Pacific archipelago. The most widely distributed ecological generalists did not decline after logging, and we detected no overall changes in relative abundance or species diversity. However, endemics with small ranges did decline in response to logging. The least mobile and most range-restricted species declined even at the smallest spatial scale, supporting the cookie cutter model for sedentary species, and suggesting that habitat change due to selective logging is contributing to biotic homogenization on islands.
热带森林干扰是全球生物多样性减少的关键驱动因素。在陆地上,伐木对特有物种的影响最大,这可能是因为干扰更有可能覆盖更窄的分布范围(“饼干切割器”模型)。岛屿拥有不成比例的生物多样性,并且更容易受到生物同质化的影响,在这种情况下,特有的地方性物种会消失,而普通物种则会存活下来。我们在太平洋群岛的一个长期实验中,在多个空间尺度上测试了热带岛屿哺乳动物对伐木的反应。分布最广泛的生态广义性物种在伐木后没有减少,我们没有检测到相对丰度或物种多样性的总体变化。然而,分布范围较小的特有物种确实会因伐木而减少。最不活跃和分布范围最受限的物种甚至在最小的空间尺度上也会减少,这支持了对定居物种的“饼干切割器”模型,并表明选择性伐木导致的栖息地变化正在导致岛屿上的生物同质化。