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The role of forest structure and human occupation in structuring mammal assemblages in oligotrophic ecosystems of C entral A mazonia
Author(s) -
Tardio Bruno Marchena Romão,
Da Silveira Ronis
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
austral ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.688
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 1442-9985
DOI - 10.1111/aec.12217
Subject(s) - arboreal locomotion , ecology , frugivore , transect , mammal , geography , herbivore , ecosystem , omnivore , canopy , community structure , biomass (ecology) , predation , biology , habitat
Abstract Large mammals are vulnerable to extinction, and respond directly to ecological gradients within the forest and to the intensity of forest product use by humans. In this study, we evaluated the effects of differences in forest structure and human occupation history on the composition of medium and large‐sized mammal assemblages of the terra‐firme forests of the A navilhanas N ational P ark, one of the most oligotrophic A mazonian ecosystems. Mammal surveys were conducted along 11 linear transects of 4 km, six of which were located in areas once inhabited by people and managed until the year that the park was created (over 30 years ago), and five in areas that were not inhabited at that time. We detected 469 individuals of 26 species during diurnal and nocturnal sampling, and 11 additional species outside transects. Human occupation history was strongly related to forest structure components. Fruit biomass, canopy cover and tree size were strongly associated with uninhabited areas, and influenced the structure of mammal assemblages. A direct relationship between diet category and species size was observed. Large frugivore‐herbivores and carnivores were more closely associated with areas with more fruit, larger trees and greater canopy cover. In contrast, small arboreal frugivore‐omnivores associated more closely with open canopy and smaller trees. Our study indicated that the effects of human occupation history on forest structure are still evident three decades after the removal of local people from the park. This long‐term effect can be explained by the low resilience of the A navilhanas environments, demonstrating the fragility of mammal assemblages in face of anthropogenic variation in forest structure in the oligotrophic ecosystems of the N egro R iver basin.