Biogeography of central African forests: Determinants, ongoing threats and conservation priorities of mammal assemblages

Author:

Fonteyn Davy123ORCID,Vermeulen Cédric1ORCID,Gorel Anaïs‐Pasiphaé4ORCID,Silva de Miranda Pedro Luiz1ORCID,Lhoest Simon15ORCID,Fayolle Adeline1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Gembloux Agro‐Bio Tech‐University of Liège Gembloux Belgium

2. CIRAD, UPR Forêts et Sociétés Campus International de Baillarguet Montpellier Cedex 5 France

3. Forêts et Sociétés Univ Montpellier, CIRAD Montpellier France

4. Laboratory of Plant Ecology, Department of Plants and Crops, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering Ghent University Ghent Belgium

5. Center for Biodiversity Outcomes Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractAimCentral Africa shelters diverse and iconic megafauna, which is threatened by climate and land‐use changes and increased hunting‐induced defaunation. Though crucial for coordinating regional conservation actions, how species assemblages are spatially structured remains poorly understood. This study aims to fill this knowledge gap for mammals across central African forests.LocationTropical moist forests from Nigeria to the Albertine Rift.MethodsAn extensive compilation of forest‐dwelling mammal species lists was made from wildlife and bushmeat‐related surveys across central Africa. A beta‐diversity approach enabling the clustering of surveys composed of similar species was implemented to identify and delimit zoogeographic districts, separately for three well‐documented mammal orders: carnivores, primates and artiodactyls. Random forest classification models were then used to identify the environmental determinants of the district's distribution and to produce a continuous zoogeographic map (and associated uncertainties) critical to assess the conservation status of each district and their ongoing threats.ResultsWhile carnivores do not present a clear spatial structure within central African forests, our findings highlight the structuring role of rivers on both primate and artiodactyl assemblages' distributions. We retained eight and six spatially congruent districts for primates and artiodactyls, respectively. These districts were shaped by the Ubangi‐Congo River system, and the Cross and Sanaga Rivers, with a secondary role of insularity and precipitation identified for primates. Highly threatened districts were highlighted, especially in Nigeria and in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the latter including vast areas that are understudied and poorly represented in the protected area network.Main ConclusionsBeyond refining our understanding of the diversity and uniqueness of mammalian assemblages across central African forests, our map of zoogeographic districts has far‐reaching implications for the conservation of highly threatened taxa, allowing to target species and areas of interest for further sampling, conservation and rewilding efforts.

Funder

Belgian American Educational Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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