1. Composition of the Anuran Community in a Forest Management Area in Southeastern Amazonia.
- Author
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Pereira, Fabrício Otávio do Nascimento, dos Santos, Graciliano Galdino Alves, Serra, Anderson Borges, Miranda, Cleuton Lima, Araújo, Guilherme da Silva, and Ruz, Emil José Hernández
- Subjects
FOREST reserves ,COMMUNITY forests ,FOREST management ,SPECIES diversity ,ILLEGAL logging - Abstract
Forest management strategies often compromised the patterns and processes of the naturally dynamic forest ecosystems. As species occurrence and diversity are directly associated with ecological and environment factors, this study evaluated the effect of low-impact forest management on the structure of the anuran community, considering the effects of the environment types generated by the management and the post-exploitation time in the Fazenda Uberlândia, southeastern Amazonia (Portel, Pará, Brazil). Field data were collected in the period of the highest rainfall in the region (February to March 2021) by sampling 84 linear transects (25 m each) at a minimum distance of 500 m between them. The time elapsed since logging that took place in the study sites varied from 2 to 17 years. We analyzed an area without forest management (used as a control) and three environment types formed by logging activities: secondary roads, skid trails, and storage yard. Our results showed no differences in species richness, abundance, and composition of the anuran community with respect to time since exploitation. Meanwhile, we found significant differences across different environment types, suggesting that the observed pattern of richness and abundance may benefit the assembly of anurans in the short term. Still, over a longer period, it may have a homogenizing effect, gradually modifying the anurofauna assemblage in managed areas to favor species adapted to more open environments, resulting in damage to the local diversity of anurans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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