Contrasting the distribution of butterflies and termites in plantations and tropical forests

被引:0
|
作者
Yves Basset
Héctor Barrios
José Alejandro Ramirez
Yacksecari Lopez
James Coronado
Filonila Perez
Stephany Arizala
Ricardo Bobadilla
Maurice Leponce
机构
[1] Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute,Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia and Institute of Entomology
[2] Biology Centre of Czech Academy of Sciences,Maestria de Entomologia
[3] Universidad de Panamá,Operational Directorate Natural Environment
[4] Institut Royal DES Sciences Naturelles de Belgique,undefined
来源
关键词
Barro Colorado Island; Cedro espino; Faunal turnover; Isoptera; Teak;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In the tropics vast areas of natural forests are being converted into plantations. The magnitude of the resulting loss in arthropod biodiversity and associated ecosystem services represents a significant topic of research. In this study we contrasted the abundance, species richness and faunal turnover of butterflies, resident butterflies (i.e., whose host plants were ascertained to occur in the habitats studied) and termites between small (average 4.3 ha) 20+ year old exotic plantations (teak and Terminalia), native plantations (Cedro espino), and an old growth forest in Panama. We used Pollard walks and manual search to quantify the abundance or occurrence of butterflies and termites, respectively. In 2014 we observed 4610 butterflies representing 266 species and 108 termite encounters (out of 160 quadrats) representing 15 species. Butterflies were more abundant and diverse in plantations than in the forest, whereas this pattern was opposite for resident butterflies and termites. There was marked faunal turnover between plantations and forest. We conclude that (a) the magnitude of faunal changes between forest and plantations is less drastic for termites than for butterflies; (b) resident butterfly species are more impacted by the conversion of forest to plantations than all butterflies, including transient species; and (c) species richness does not necessarily decrease in the series forest > native > exotic plantations. Whereas there are advantages of studying more tractable taxa such as butterflies, the responses of such taxa can be highly unrepresentative of other invertebrate groups responsible for different ecological services.
引用
收藏
页码:151 / 176
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Termite assemblages in dry tropical forests of Northeastern Brazil: Are termites bioindicators of environmental disturbances?
    Viana Junior, A. B.
    Souza, V. B.
    Reis, Y. T.
    Marques-Costa, A. P.
    SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2014, 61 (03): : 324 - 331
  • [22] Alterations in litter decomposition patterns in tropical montane forests of Colombia: a comparison of oak forests and coniferous plantations
    Carlos Loaiza-Usuga, Juan
    Leon-Pelaez, Juan D.
    Gonzalez-Hernandez, Maria I.
    Fernando Gallardo-Lancho, Juan
    Osorio-Vega, Walter
    Correa-Londono, Guillermo
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2013, 43 (06) : 528 - 533
  • [23] Tropical reptiles in pine forests: Assemblage responses to plantations and plantation management by burning
    Mott, Beth
    Alford, Ross A.
    Schwarzkopf, Lin
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2010, 259 (05) : 916 - 925
  • [24] Monitoring expansion of plantations in Lao tropical forests using Landsat time series
    Phompila, Chittana
    Lewis, Megan
    Clarke, Kenneth
    Ostendorf, Bertram
    LAND SURFACE REMOTE SENSING II, 2014, 9260
  • [25] Soil respiration in sloping rubber plantations and tropical natural forests in Xishuangbanna, China
    Goldberg, Stefanie Daniela
    Zhao, Yongli
    Harrison, Rhett D.
    Monkai, Jutamart
    Li, Yuwu
    Chau, Kating
    Xu, Jianchu
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 249 : 237 - 246
  • [26] Tropical reptiles in pine forests: Assemblage responses to plantations and plantation management by burning
    School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD 4810, Australia
    For. Ecol. Manage., 1600, 5 (916-925):
  • [27] Contrasting structure and composition of the understory in species-rich tropical rain forests
    LaFrankie, James V.
    Ashton, Peter S.
    Chuyong, George B.
    Co, Leonardo
    Condit, Richard
    Davies, Stuart J.
    Foster, Robin
    Hubbell, Stephen P.
    Kenfack, David
    Lagunzad, Daniel
    Losos, Elizabeth C.
    Nor, Noor Supardi Md.
    Tan, Sylvester
    Thomas, Duncan W.
    Valencia, Renato
    Villa, Gorky
    ECOLOGY, 2006, 87 (09) : 2298 - 2305
  • [28] Phyllostomid bat community structure and abundance in two contrasting tropical dry forests
    Stoner, KE
    BIOTROPICA, 2005, 37 (04) : 591 - 599
  • [29] Physiological plasticity of epiphytic orchids from two contrasting tropical dry forests
    de la Rosa-Manzano, Edilia
    Luis Andrade, Jose
    Zotz, Gerhard
    Reyes-Garcia, Casandra
    ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2017, 85 : 25 - 32
  • [30] Network complexity of rubber plantations is lower than tropical forests for soil bacteria but not for fungi
    Lan, Guoyu
    Yang, Chuan
    Wu, Zhixiang
    Sun, Rui
    Chen, Bangqian
    Zhang, Xicai
    SOIL, 2022, 8 (01) : 149 - 161