| Literature DB >> 27672498 |
Gilbert Barrantes1, Diego Ocampo1, José D Ramírez-Fernández1, Eric J Fuchs1.
Abstract
Deforestation and changes in land use have reduced the tropical dry forest to isolated forest patches in northwestern Costa Rica. We examined the effect of patch area and length of the dry season on nestedness of the entire avian community, forest fragment assemblages, and species occupancy across fragments for the entire native avifauna, and for a subset of forest dependent species. Species richness was independent of both fragment area and distance between fragments. Similarity in bird community composition between patches was related to habitat structure; fragments with similar forest structure have more similar avian assemblages. Size of forest patches influenced nestedness of the bird community and species occupancy, but not nestedness of assemblages across patches in northwestern Costa Rican avifauna. Forest dependent species (species that require large tracts of mature forest) and assemblages of these species were nested within patches ordered by a gradient of seasonality, and only occupancy of species was nested by area of patches. Thus, forest patches with a shorter dry season include more forest dependent species.Entities:
Keywords: Bird composition; Community similarity; Forest size patches; Habitat; Habitat fragmentation; Nested community analysis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27672498 PMCID: PMC5028763 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Area, location and number of native species recorded in five dry forest fragments in northwestern Costa Rica.
Dry season includes the length of dry season in months and is based on meteorological stations located in the same or nearby sites.
| Locality | Dry season | Area (ha) | Location | No. of species |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santa Rosa | 6–6.5 | 37,117 | 10°50′N, 85°37′W | 123 |
| Palo Verde | 5–5.5 | 11,970 | 10°20′N, 85°20′W | 135 |
| Rincón de laVieja | 2–3 | 8,411 | 10°49′N, 85°21′W | 127 |
| Diriá | 4.5–5 | 5,426 | 10°10′N, 85°35′W | 109 |
| Cabo Blanco | 3–4 | 1,172 | 09°33′N, 85°06′W | 104 |
Figure 1Dry forest fragments and land use in northwestern Costa Rica.
The inset shows the map of Costa Rica.
Sørensen similarity index and the number of species shared between sites in parentheses (below the diagonal) and distance (km) (above the diagonal) between five forest patches in northwestern Costa Rica.
Larger values of the Sørensen similarity index indicate greater similarity in species composition between sites.
| Distance | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S. Rosa | P. Verde | Diria | C. Blanco | R. Vieja | ||
| Similarity | S. Rosa | 77.9 | 72.6 | 71.5 | 63.6 | |
| P. Verde | 0.80 (116) | 68.9 | 69.4 | 58.9 | ||
| Diria | 0.82 (92) | 0.71 (97) | 70.6 | 61.3 | ||
| C. Blanco | 0.81 (88) | 0.67 (94) | 0.85 (86) | 64.6 | ||
| R. Vieja | 0.73 (88) | 0.62 (90) | 0.70 (80) | 0.76 (84) | ||
Figure 2Relationship between area of fragments and seasonality, estimated as the length of dry season in months.
Species included in each category of forest dependence.
The first row includes the total number of species in each category and the number of species detected in a single sampling site. The other rows include the number of species of that particular category detected in each site and the number of species detected only in that particular site. The percentage of restricted species of each category per site is shown in parentheses.
| Site | Category 1 | Category 2 | Category 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. species | Restricted | No. species | Restricted | No. species | Restricted | |
| Total | 33 | 18 | 101 | 26 | 53 | 4 |
| Santa Rosa | 10 | 0 (0) | 71 | 1 (4) | 42 | 0 (0) |
| Palo Verde | 14 | 2 (11) | 74 | 4 (15) | 47 | 1 (25) |
| Diriá | 14 | 3 (17) | 58 | 2 (8) | 37 | 2 (50) |
| C. Blanco | 10 | 0 (0) | 61 | 4 (15) | 33 | 0 (0) |
| R. Vieja | 22 | 13 (72) | 70 | 15 (58) | 35 | 1 (25) |