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High butterfly beta diversity between Brazilian cerrado and cerrado–caatinga transition zones

Authors :
Frederico de Siqueira Neves
Carla M. Penz
G. Wilson Fernandes
Marina do Vale Beirão
Philip J. DeVries
Source :
Journal of Insect Conservation. 21:849-860
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Tropical dry forests are among the most diverse and threatened habitats in the world, yet they are rarely protected and remain poorly studied. In Brazil, dry forests are naturally fragmented and embedded within various biomes, thus making it important to assess biotic homogeneity among geographically separated forest fragments. We sampled 7732 individuals belonging to 48 species to quantify the diversity of fruit-feeding butterfly communities at four Brazilian dry forest sites, and found differences in community structure between northern and central sites. Species richness per plot was the same in both areas, but abundance per plot was higher in northern sites. Species composition differed between sites mostly due to species of Satyrinae. Additive partitioning showed that beta diversity corresponded to 70.1% of all diversity. Rather than species loss, beta diversity primarily represented species turnover that was potentially driven by differences in the surrounding habitats. Butterfly community composition and abundance were influenced by vegetation where abundance increased with tree density and basal area, and decreased with the average tree height. Butterfly species richness and abundance were higher in the wet season than in the dry season, and all species sampled in the dry season were present in the wet season. Differences in community structure across relatively short geographic distances in the same type of habitat highlight the importance of conserving tropical dry forest fragments to ensure the maintenance of butterfly diversity and, presumably, other insects.

Details

ISSN :
15729753 and 1366638X
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Insect Conservation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ee5c8616439b06e8f93f76d1a9be115f