雨林改造景观中为人类和极度濒危野生动物提供的服务减少

Katherine J. Kling, T. Eppley, A. C. Markham, Patricia C. Wright, B. Razafindrapaoly, Rajaona Delox, B. J. R. Rasolofoniaina, J. M. Randriamanetsy, Pascal Elison, McAntonin Andriamahaihavana, Dean Gibson, Delaïd C Rasamisoa, J. Razafindramanana, N. Vasey, Carter W. Daniels, C. Borgerson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球森林和其他生态系统的丧失和退化既威胁着全球生物多样性,也威胁着自然资源使用者的生计。我们使用了来自社区焦点小组、植物地块和极度濒危红褶狐猴(Varecia rubra)食用植物物种清单的数据,以评估马达加斯加东北部雨林改造景观马索拉半岛(马索拉国家公园及周边 13 个社区)上人类和特有野生动物的主要供给服务可用性。我们构建了泊松回归混合模型,以评估社区因素(即社区人口数量、地块与社区的距离)和随时间推移的变化对植物地块内用材树、药用植物和红臀狐猴食用树的数量和物种丰富度的影响。在 59 种红叶狐猴食用树种中,只有 15%没有人类使用的报告。木材和红叶狐猴食用树的可用性随着社区人口规模和时间的增长而下降,预计在马索阿拉国家公园以外的地区会更低。与此相反,药用植物的可用性并没有受到任何测试因素的强烈影响。我们的研究结果凸显了从社区角度并根据资源目的评估自然资源可用性的重要性,从而为森林景观恢复工作提供信息,为人类和野生动物提供支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Provisioning services decline for both people and Critically Endangered wildlife in a rainforest transformation landscape
The loss and degradation of forests and other ecosystems worldwide threaten both global biodiversity and the livelihoods of people who use natural resources. Understanding how natural resource use impacts landscape provisioning services for both people and wildlife is thus critical for designing comprehensive resource management strategies. We used data from community focus groups, botanical plots and an inventory of plant species consumed by the Critically Endangered red‐ruffed lemur (Varecia rubra) to assess the availability of key provisioning services for people and endemic wildlife on the Masoala Peninsula, a rainforest transformation landscape, in northeastern Madagascar (Masoala National Park and 13 surrounding communities). We constructed Poisson regression mixed models to evaluate the impact of community factors (i.e. community population size, plot distance to community) and changes over time on the count and species richness of timber trees, medicinal plants and red‐ruffed lemur food trees within botanical plots. Over three‐quarters of all plant species could be used for at least one purpose by local communities (n = 238 species). Of the 59 V. rubra food tree species, only 15% had no reported human use. Timber and ruffed lemur food tree availability declined both with community population size and time and were predicted to be lower outside of Masoala National Park. In contrast, medicinal plant availability was not strongly predicted by any tested factors. Provisioning service availability also differed strongly across sites, suggesting that additional, untested proxies of human pressure likely also have an effect. Our results highlight the importance of evaluating natural resource availability from a community‐based perspective and by resource purpose to inform forest landscape restoration efforts that can support both people and wildlife. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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