Chiarello Adriano G
Wildlife Research Group, Department of Anatomy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3DY, United Kingdom.
Conserv Biol. 2000 Dec 18;14(6):1649-1657. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2000.99071.x.
From October 1994 to April 1996, I surveyed six Atlantic forest reserves, two large (approximately 20,000 ha each), two medium-sized (approximately 2000 ha each), and two small (approximately 200 ha each), located in northern Espírito Santo, southeastern Brazil, for mammals openface> 1 kg body weight. My main objective was to assess the effects of fragmentation on population sizes and densities of five abundant species of forest-dwelling species (three primates and two rodents). I used line-transect sampling to survey mammals and estimated densities through the DISTANCE program. The average density of mammals increased from small to medium to large fragments, with small fragments having an average mammal density ( 7.6 individuals/km ) significantly lower than that of large fragments (20.9 individuals/km ). This trend was not significant when species that were extinct or absent in some fragments were excluded from the analysis. Shortage of food ( fruits) and predation by small cats ( Leopardus sp.) are the likely factors contributing to the demise of mammals, most of which are frugivores, in small fragments. Estimates of population sizes were on the order of several hundred to thousands of individuals for the large reserves, whereas comparable estimates for the other areas indicate a few hundred individuals for the medium-sized reserves and <100 individuals per species in the small reserves. The estimates provided here indicate that only Atlantic forest reserves of ≥20,000 ha can sustain viable populations ( N ≅ 500 individuals) of the five species studied, which represent only about 14% of all medium-sized to large species of mammals known to be present in fragments of this size. Given that only about 20% of all protected areas remaining in the Atlantic forest are equal to or larger than this size, management measures are badly needed to improve mammal conservation in this biome.
1994年10月至1996年4月,我对位于巴西东南部圣埃斯皮里图州北部的6个大西洋森林保护区进行了调查,其中两个大型保护区(每个约20000公顷)、两个中型保护区(每个约2000公顷)和两个小型保护区(每个约200公顷),调查对象为体重超过1千克的哺乳动物。我的主要目的是评估森林碎片化对5种常见森林栖息物种(3种灵长类动物和2种啮齿动物)的种群大小和密度的影响。我采用样线抽样法对哺乳动物进行调查,并通过DISTANCE程序估算密度。哺乳动物的平均密度从小型保护区到中型保护区再到大型保护区呈增加趋势,小型保护区的平均哺乳动物密度(7.6只/平方千米)显著低于大型保护区(20.9只/平方千米)。当分析中排除某些保护区中灭绝或不存在的物种时,这种趋势并不显著。食物(果实)短缺和小型猫科动物(豹猫属)的捕食可能是导致小型保护区中大多数以果实为食的哺乳动物死亡的因素。大型保护区的种群数量估计为数百至数千只,而其他区域的可比估计表明,中型保护区有几百只,小型保护区每个物种不到100只。此处提供的估计表明,只有面积≥20000公顷的大西洋森林保护区才能维持所研究的5个物种的可存活种群(种群数量约为500只),这5个物种仅占已知存在于这种规模片段中的所有中型至大型哺乳动物物种的约14%。鉴于大西洋森林中仅约20%的剩余保护区面积等于或大于此规模,迫切需要采取管理措施来改善该生物群落中哺乳动物的保护状况。