Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Rutt, Cameron L.
Data de Publicação: 2019
Outros Autores: Jirinec, Vitek, Cohn-Haft, Mario, Laurance, William F., Stouffer, Philip C.
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional do INPA
Texto Completo: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15340
Resumo: Approximately 20% of the Brazilian Amazon has now been deforested, and the Amazon is currently experiencing the highest rates of deforestation in a decade, leading to large-scale land-use changes. Roads have consistently been implicated as drivers of ongoing Amazon deforestation and may act as corridors to facilitate species invasions. Long-term data, however, are necessary to determine how ecological succession alters avian communities following deforestation and whether established roads lead to a constant influx of new species. We used data across nearly 40 years from a large-scale deforestation experiment in the central Amazon to examine the avian colonization process in a spatial and temporal framework, considering the role that roads may play in facilitating colonization. Since 1979, 139 species that are not part of the original forest avifauna have been recorded, including more secondary forest species than expected based on the regional species pool. Among the 35 species considered to have colonized and become established, a disproportionate number were secondary forest birds (63%), almost all of which first appeared during the 1980s. These new residents comprise about 13% of the current community of permanent residents. Widespread generalists associated with secondary forest colonized quickly following deforestation, with few new species added after the first decade, despite a stable road connection. Few species associated with riverine forest or specialized habitats colonized, despite road connection to their preferred source habitat. Colonizing species remained restricted to anthropogenic habitats and did not infiltrate old-growth forests nor displace forest birds. Deforestation and expansion of road networks into terra firme rainforest will continue to create degraded anthropogenic habitat. Even so, the initial pulse of colonization by nonprimary forest bird species was not the beginning of a protracted series of invasions in this study, and the process appears to be reversible by forest succession. © 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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spelling Rutt, Cameron L.Jirinec, VitekCohn-Haft, MarioLaurance, William F.Stouffer, Philip C.2020-05-08T20:19:05Z2020-05-08T20:19:05Z2019https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/1534010.1002/ece3.5822Approximately 20% of the Brazilian Amazon has now been deforested, and the Amazon is currently experiencing the highest rates of deforestation in a decade, leading to large-scale land-use changes. Roads have consistently been implicated as drivers of ongoing Amazon deforestation and may act as corridors to facilitate species invasions. Long-term data, however, are necessary to determine how ecological succession alters avian communities following deforestation and whether established roads lead to a constant influx of new species. We used data across nearly 40 years from a large-scale deforestation experiment in the central Amazon to examine the avian colonization process in a spatial and temporal framework, considering the role that roads may play in facilitating colonization. Since 1979, 139 species that are not part of the original forest avifauna have been recorded, including more secondary forest species than expected based on the regional species pool. Among the 35 species considered to have colonized and become established, a disproportionate number were secondary forest birds (63%), almost all of which first appeared during the 1980s. These new residents comprise about 13% of the current community of permanent residents. Widespread generalists associated with secondary forest colonized quickly following deforestation, with few new species added after the first decade, despite a stable road connection. Few species associated with riverine forest or specialized habitats colonized, despite road connection to their preferred source habitat. Colonizing species remained restricted to anthropogenic habitats and did not infiltrate old-growth forests nor displace forest birds. Deforestation and expansion of road networks into terra firme rainforest will continue to create degraded anthropogenic habitat. Even so, the initial pulse of colonization by nonprimary forest bird species was not the beginning of a protracted series of invasions in this study, and the process appears to be reversible by forest succession. © 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Volume 9, Número 24, Pags. 13850-13861Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazilhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/br/info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAvian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestationinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleEcology and Evolutionengreponame:Repositório Institucional do INPAinstname:Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA)instacron:INPAORIGINALartigo-inpa.pdfartigo-inpa.pdfapplication/pdf896157https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/bitstream/1/15340/1/artigo-inpa.pdfbbd75457ee165b1229fe3db642607f72MD511/153402020-07-14 11:07:13.692oai:repositorio:1/15340Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/oai/requestopendoar:2020-07-14T15:07:13Repositório Institucional do INPA - Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA)false
dc.title.en.fl_str_mv Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
title Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
spellingShingle Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
Rutt, Cameron L.
title_short Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
title_full Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
title_fullStr Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
title_full_unstemmed Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
title_sort Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long-term case study following experimental deforestation
author Rutt, Cameron L.
author_facet Rutt, Cameron L.
Jirinec, Vitek
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Laurance, William F.
Stouffer, Philip C.
author_role author
author2 Jirinec, Vitek
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Laurance, William F.
Stouffer, Philip C.
author2_role author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Rutt, Cameron L.
Jirinec, Vitek
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Laurance, William F.
Stouffer, Philip C.
description Approximately 20% of the Brazilian Amazon has now been deforested, and the Amazon is currently experiencing the highest rates of deforestation in a decade, leading to large-scale land-use changes. Roads have consistently been implicated as drivers of ongoing Amazon deforestation and may act as corridors to facilitate species invasions. Long-term data, however, are necessary to determine how ecological succession alters avian communities following deforestation and whether established roads lead to a constant influx of new species. We used data across nearly 40 years from a large-scale deforestation experiment in the central Amazon to examine the avian colonization process in a spatial and temporal framework, considering the role that roads may play in facilitating colonization. Since 1979, 139 species that are not part of the original forest avifauna have been recorded, including more secondary forest species than expected based on the regional species pool. Among the 35 species considered to have colonized and become established, a disproportionate number were secondary forest birds (63%), almost all of which first appeared during the 1980s. These new residents comprise about 13% of the current community of permanent residents. Widespread generalists associated with secondary forest colonized quickly following deforestation, with few new species added after the first decade, despite a stable road connection. Few species associated with riverine forest or specialized habitats colonized, despite road connection to their preferred source habitat. Colonizing species remained restricted to anthropogenic habitats and did not infiltrate old-growth forests nor displace forest birds. Deforestation and expansion of road networks into terra firme rainforest will continue to create degraded anthropogenic habitat. Even so, the initial pulse of colonization by nonprimary forest bird species was not the beginning of a protracted series of invasions in this study, and the process appears to be reversible by forest succession. © 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
publishDate 2019
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2019
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2020-05-08T20:19:05Z
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2020-05-08T20:19:05Z
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dc.identifier.doi.none.fl_str_mv 10.1002/ece3.5822
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Volume 9, Número 24, Pags. 13850-13861
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Ecology and Evolution
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