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Erschienen in: Biodiversity and Conservation 10/2017

05.05.2017 | Original Paper

Neotropical moth assemblages degrade due to oil palm expansion

verfasst von: Aura M. Alonso-Rodríguez, Bryan Finegan, Konrad Fiedler

Erschienen in: Biodiversity and Conservation | Ausgabe 10/2017

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Abstract

Oil palm is one of the most rapidly expanding crops throughout the tropics, yet little is known about its impacts on Neotropical invertebrate biodiversity. Responses of insect assemblages to land conversion may substantially vary among taxa. We assessed geometrid and arctiine moth assemblages in a Costa Rican human dominated landscape, where oil palm plantations are now the second most common land cover. Moths were sampled during 6 months with automatic traps in the interior and margin of old-growth forests, young secondary forests and oil palm plantations in a 30 km2 area. Our results show that richness and diversity of both taxa were severely reduced in oil palm compared to all other habitats. Geometrid abundance was highest in forest interiors and lowest in oil palm, while arctiine numbers did not differ between habitats. Dominance was highest in oil palm plantations, where one arctiine species and one geometrid species accounted for over 40% of total abundance in each of their respective taxa. Species composition was distinct in oil palm and forest interior sites, and depicted a gradient of habitat disturbance in ordination space that was strongly related to vegetation diversity and structure. This study demonstrates that oil palm plantations are not a suitable habitat for these moth taxa. Whilst some arctiine species seem adapted to disturbed habitats, geometrids were more dependent on old-growth forests, showing higher bioindicator potential. In the face of accelerated oil palm expansion, conservation strategies should focus on protecting old-growth forest remnants, as well as increasing species diversity and structural complexity of degraded habitats.

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Metadaten
Titel
Neotropical moth assemblages degrade due to oil palm expansion
verfasst von
Aura M. Alonso-Rodríguez
Bryan Finegan
Konrad Fiedler
Publikationsdatum
05.05.2017
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Biodiversity and Conservation / Ausgabe 10/2017
Print ISSN: 0960-3115
Elektronische ISSN: 1572-9710
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-017-1357-1

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