info:eu-repo/semantics/article
How do habitat amount and habitat fragmentation drive time-delayed responses of biodiversity to land-use change?
Fecha
2021-01Registro en:
Semper Pascual, Asunción; Burton, Cole; Baumann, Matthias; Decarre, Julieta; Gavier Pizarro, Gregorio; et al.; How do habitat amount and habitat fragmentation drive time-delayed responses of biodiversity to land-use change?; The Royal Society; Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences; 288; 1942; 1-2021; 1-10
1471-2954
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Semper Pascual, Asunción
Burton, Cole
Baumann, Matthias
Decarre, Julieta
Gavier Pizarro, Gregorio
Gomez Valencia, Bibiana
Macchi, Leandro
Mastrangelo, Matias Enrique
Pötzschner, Florian
Zelaya, Patricia Viviana
Kuemmerle, Tobias
Resumen
Land-use change is a root cause of the extinction crisis, but links between habitat change and biodiversity loss are not fully understood. While there is evidence that habitat loss is an important extinction driver, the relevance of habitat fragmentation remains debated. Moreover, while time delays of biodiversity responses to habitat transformation are well-documented, time-delayed effects have been ignored in the habitat loss versus fragmentation debate. Here, using a hierarchical Bayesian multi-species occupancy framework, we systematically tested for time-delayed responses of bird and mammal communities to habitat loss and to habitat fragmentation. We focused on the Argentine Chaco, where deforestation has been widespread recently. We used an extensive field dataset on birds and mammals, along with a time series of annual woodland maps from 1985 to 2016 covering recent and historical habitat transformations. Contemporary habitat amount explained bird and mammal occupancy better than past habitat amount. However, occupancy was affected more by the past rather than recent fragmentation, indicating a time-delayed response to fragmentation. Considering past landscape patterns is therefore crucial for understanding current biodiversity patterns. Not accounting for land-use history ignores the possibility of extinction debt and can thus obscure impacts of fragmentation, potentially explaining contrasting findings of habitat loss versus fragmentation studies.