Título
Landscape attributes shape dung beetle diversity at multiple spatial scales in agricultural drylands
11627/631411627/6314
Autor
Estupiñan Mojica, Anderson
Liberal, Carolina Nunes
Santos, Braulio A
Machado, Celia C. C.
Pereira De Araujo, Helder Farias
Von Thaden, Juan José
Alvarado Roberto, Fredy Alexander
Resumen
"Land-use change is one of the main drivers of biodiversity loss worldwide, but its negative effects can vary depending on the spatial scale analyzed. Considering the continuous expansion of agricultural demand for land, it is urgent to identify the drivers that shape biological communities in order to balance agricultural production and biodiversity conservation in human-modified landscapes. We used a patch-landscape design and a multimodel inference approach to assess the effects of landscape composition and configuration at two spatial scales (patch and landscape) on the structure of dung beetle assemblages. We performed our study in the Caatinga, the largest dry forest in South America. We sampled 3,526 dung beetles belonging to 19 species and 11 genera. At patch scale, our findings highlight the positive relationship of forest cover and landscape heterogeneity with dung beetle diversity, which are the major drivers of beetle assemblages. Edge density, in turn, is a major driver at the landscape scale and has a negative effect on beetle diversity. Our results support the hypothesis that landscapes combining natural vegetation remnants and heterogeneous agricultural landscapes are the most effective at conserving the biodiversity of dung beetles in the Caatinga landscapes. Directing efforts to better understand the dynamics of dung beetles in agricultural lands can be helpful for policymakers and scientists to design agri-environment schemes and apply conservation strategies in tropical dry forests."
Fecha de publicación
2022Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2022.06.002Área de conocimiento
ECOLOGÍA VEGETALColecciones
Editor
ElsevierPalabras clave
AgroecosystemBiodiversity
Human-dominated landscapes
Land use and land cover change
Seasonally tropical dry forest