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Impact of cocoa agricultural intensification on bird diversity and community composition
Author(s) -
Bennett Ruth E.,
Sillett T. Scott,
Rice Robert A.,
Marra Peter P.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1111/cobi.13779
Subject(s) - theobroma , geography , biodiversity , agroforestry , agriculture , generalist and specialist species , ecology , agroecosystem , habitat , species diversity , secondary forest , forestry , biology , botany
To meet the growing demand for chocolate, cocoa ( Theobroma cacao ) agriculture is expanding and intensifying. Although this threatens tropical forests, cocoa sustainability initiatives largely overlook biodiversity conservation. To inform these initiatives, we analyzed how cocoa agriculture affects bird diversity at farm and landscape scales with a meta‐analysis of 23 studies. We extracted 214 Hedges' g * comparisons of bird diversity and 14 comparisons of community similarity between a forest baseline and 4 farming systems that cover an intensification gradient in landscapes with high and low forest cover, and we summarized 119 correlations between cocoa farm features and bird diversity. Bird diversity declined sharply in low shade cocoa. Cocoa with >30% canopy cover from diverse trees retained bird diversity similar to nearby primary or mature secondary forest but held a different community of birds. Diversity of endemic species, frugivores, and insectivores (agriculture avoiders) declined, whereas diversity of habitat generalists, migrants, nectarivores, and granivores (agriculture associates) increased. As forest decreased on the landscape, the difference in bird community composition between forest and cocoa also decreased, indicating agriculture associates replaced agriculture avoiders in forest patches. Our results emphasize the need to conserve forested landscapes (land sparing) and invest in mixed‐shade agroforestry (land sharing) because each strategy benefits a diverse and distinct biological community.

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