1. Effects of shrub encroachment on the anuran community in periodically flooded grasslands of the largest Neotropical wetland.
- Author
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Dorado‐Rodrigues, Tainá Figueras, Layme, Viviane Maria Guedes, Silva, Fernando Henrique Barbosa, Nunes da Cunha, Cátia, and Strüssmann, Christine
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SHRUBS , *GRASSLANDS , *FUELWOOD crops , *WETLANDS , *FOREST litter , *SOIL moisture , *MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
In many parts of the world, replacement of natural grasslands by woody plants has resulted in a decrease of pasture areas and in habitat loss for a variety of animal species, including amphibians. Wetlands are especially susceptible to invasive plants, both native and exotic, but the effects of such invasions on animal assemblages remain poorly understood. Here, we present information on the impact of selected environmental variables, especially coverage by the native shrub C ombretum laxum Jacq., on the structure of an anuran assemblage in the Pantanal, a huge flood-pulsed South American wetland. Anurans were surveyed during the rainy season in 17 plots, which differed in extent of C . laxum coverage, leaf litter volume, soil moisture and distance to permanently wet areas. Effects of these environmental variables on the species number, relative abundance and composition of the anuran assemblage were evaluated using multivariate statistical analyses. We captured 1203 anurans, of 21 species from four families. Both the number of species and the relative abundance of anurans were lower in plots with greater C . laxum coverage, which also influenced anuran species composition. Number of species was highest in plots located closest to permanently wet areas, which provide protection from desiccation and other resources during the Pantanal dry season, and so could be considered source areas of anurans. While many anuran species were negatively affected by the homogenization of the landscape caused by shrub encroachment, some seemed to be favoured in such circumstances. For these, dense shrub encroachment into natural grasslands may provide safer migratory routes to permanently wet habitats. Thus, at the mesoscale, a mosaic of areas with different levels of coverage by C . laxum (shrub islands) may aid anuran assemblages in the Pantanal wetlands, facilitating the maintenance of higher beta and gamma diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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