Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15841
Título: Standardized Assessment of Biodiversity Trends in Tropical Forest Protected Areas: The End Is Not in Sight
Autor: Beaudrot, Lydia H.
Ahumada, Jorge A.
O’Brien, Timothy L.
Álvarez-Loayza, Patricia
Boekee, Kelly
Campos-Arceiz, Ahimsa
Eichberg, David
Espinosa, Santiago
Fegraus, Eric H.
Fletcher, Christine Dawn
Gajapersad, Krisna
Hallam, Chris D.
Hurtado, Johanna
Jansen, Patrick A.
Kumar, Amit
Eileen, Larney,
Lima, Marcela Guimarães Moreira
Mahony, Colin
Martin, Emanuel H.
McWilliam, Alex
Mugerwa, Badru
Ndoundou-Hockemba, Mireille
Razafimahaimodison, Jean Claude A.
Romero-Saltos, Hugo
Rovero, F.
Salvador, Julia
Santos, Fernanda da Silva
Sheil, Douglas
Spironello, Wilson Roberto
Willig, Michael R.
Winarni, Nurul Laksmi
Zvoleff, Alexander
Andelman, Sandy J.
Palavras-chave: Africa
Biodiversity
Bird
Community Structure
Controlled Study
Environmental Monitoring
Environmental Protection
Mammal
Neotropics
Nonhuman
Outcome Assessment
Quantitative Analysis
Southeast Asia
Species Diversity
Species Evenness
Species Occupancy
Species Richness
Standardization
Trend Study
Tropical Rain Forest
Animals
Bird
Ecology
Forest
Mammal
Procedures
Tropic Climate
Animal
Biodiversity
Birds
Conservation Of Natural Resources
Ecology
Forests
Mammals
Tropical Climate
Data do documento: 2016
Revista: PLoS Biology
É parte de: Volume 14, Número 1
Abstract: Extinction rates in the Anthropocene are three orders of magnitude higher than background and disproportionately occur in the tropics, home of half the world’s species. Despite global efforts to combat tropical species extinctions, lack of high-quality, objective information on tropical biodiversity has hampered quantitative evaluation of conservation strategies. In particular, the scarcity of population-level monitoring in tropical forests has stymied assessment of biodiversity outcomes, such as the status and trends of animal populations in protected areas. Here, we evaluate occupancy trends for 511 populations of terrestrial mammals and birds, representing 244 species from 15 tropical forest protected areas on three continents. For the first time to our knowledge, we use annual surveys from tropical forests worldwide that employ a standardized camera trapping protocol, and we compute data analytics that correct for imperfect detection. We found that occupancy declined in 22%, increased in 17%, and exhibited no change in 22% of populations during the last 3–8 years, while 39% of populations were detected too infrequently to assess occupancy changes. Despite extensive variability in occupancy trends, these 15 tropical protected areas have not exhibited systematic declines in biodiversity (i.e., occupancy, richness, or evenness) at the community level. Our results differ from reports of widespread biodiversity declines based on aggregated secondary data and expert opinion and suggest less extreme deterioration in tropical forest protected areas. We simultaneously fill an important conservation data gap and demonstrate the value of large-scale monitoring infrastructure and powerful analytics, which can be scaled to incorporate additional sites, ecosystems, and monitoring methods. In an era of catastrophic biodiversity loss, robust indicators produced from standardized monitoring infrastructure are critical to accurately assess population outcomes and identify conservation strategies that can avert biodiversity collapse. © 2016 Beaudrot et al.
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002357
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