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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.ufba.br/handle/ri/15982
metadata.dc.type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Forest cover, extinction thresholds and time lags in woody plants (Myrtaceae) in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest: resources for conservation
Other Titles: Biodiversity and Conservation
Authors: Rigueira, Dary Moreira Gonçalves
Rocha, Pedro Luís Bernardo da
Mariano Neto, Eduardo
metadata.dc.creator: Rigueira, Dary Moreira Gonçalves
Rocha, Pedro Luís Bernardo da
Mariano Neto, Eduardo
Abstract: Efforts to conserve tropical forests could be strengthened based on ecological knowledge, such as extinction thresholds in ecological processes. Many studies of extinction thresholds associated with habitat reduction have focused on animals, generally at the patch scale. However, certain plant groups are very interesting models with which to study this type of relationship, such as Myrtaceae in Neotropical forests. Because trees are long-lived organisms, local extinctions in response to habitat loss may occur in different ways due to a time lag. In this study, our objective was to assess the occurrence of extinction thresholds at the landscape scale for Myrtaceae in a large biome and the pattern of species reduction in different tree size classes. We studied nine landscapes with different amounts of available habitat (between 5 and 55 % forest cover) in different parts of the Atlantic Forest in Bahia, Brazil, and in each landscape, we evaluated four plant classes based on tree circumference: saplings (CBH between 8 and 15 cm), young (CBH between 15 and 30 cm) adults (CBH ≥30 cm) and total (all individuals with CBH ≥8 cm). Landscapes with forest cover less than 25 % presented an approximately sixfold reduction in Myrtaceae total species richness compared with landscapes with forest cover greater than 40 %. We identified a relationship with a threshold between the amount of available habitat at the landscape level and Myrtaceae richness, with a reduction in total, sapling and young species below a threshold of 40 % forest cover, whereas adults had an extinction threshold at 30 % forest cover. We discuss the differences among the categories of plants associated with a time lag and the possibilities and limitations in applying these results in environmental management.
Keywords: Environmental management
Habitat loss
Local extinction
Long-lived organisms
Species loss
Tropical Forest
metadata.dc.rights: Acesso Aberto
URI: http://repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/15982
Issue Date: 2013
Appears in Collections:Artigo Publicado em Periódico (Biologia)

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