Decadienal afforestation and risks to montane grassland amphibians in the Udzungwa Plateau, Tanzania

Author:

Lawson Lucinda P.12ORCID,Loader Simon P.3ORCID,Lyakurwa John V.4ORCID,Menegon Michele56ORCID,Liedtke H. Christoph7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences University of Cincinnati Cincinnati Ohio USA

2. Department of Zoology, Field Museum Chicago Illinois USA

3. Natural History Museum London UK

4. Department of Zoology and Wildlife Conservation University of Dar es Salaam Dar es Salaam Tanzania

5. Division of Biology & Conservation Ecology Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK

6. PAMS Foundation Arusha Tanzania

7. Ecology, Evolution and Development Group, Department of Wetland Ecology Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC) Sevilla Spain

Abstract

AbstractHuman modification of the environment has drastically changed ecosystems around the globe. While forest‐loss (deforestation) has been well studied for its effects on ecosystems, afforestation also has major impacts. The Udzungwa Plateau in Tanzania is naturally a mix of forests and grasslands. However, non‐native pine plantations have recently increased in the area displacing the native grasslands of the montane plateau. In this study, we explored the effects of land use change on amphibian communities by comparing amphibian surveys before non‐native plantations were introduced (~2000) and after (2017–2019). To put these amphibian surveys into wider context across the plateau and to distinguish local population loss compared to plateau‐wide extinctions, we sample diversity at new sampling locations and locations with multiple surveys through time. We then assessed landscape change through remotely sensed data and ground surveys. Amphibian encounter surveys found approximately the same species diversity across all sampling locations, but local extinctions appear likely. Remaining amphibians appear to be limited to small refugia in non‐pine wetlands. Approximately half (45%) of the species found have limited distributional ranges (<72,000 km2) and are described as habitat specialists by the IUCN Red List. Monitoring pine plantation growth using remote sensing techniques suggested only limited extensions of plantations between 2000 through to 2013–2016, but ground surveys found small pines (<3 years old) throughout almost all areas identified as grasslands on satellite imagery. Our study highlights the plight of this narrowing biome on the African continent and calls for more research on the impact of non‐native plantations on natural communities.Abstract in Swahili is available with online material.

Funder

Division of Environmental Biology

Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund

Natural History Museum

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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