Composition of non‐volant small mammals inhabiting a degradation gradient in a lowland tropical forest in Uganda

Author:

Babyesiza Sadic Waswa123ORCID,Mgode Georgies14,Mpagi Joseph Luwaga5,Sabuni Christopher13,Ssuuna James12,Akoth Sisiria123,Katakwebwa Abdul14

Affiliation:

1. Africa Centre of Excellence for Innovative Rodent Pest Management and Biosensor Technology Development (ACE IRPM&BTD)

2. Department of Wildlife Management, Sokoine University of Agriculture Morogoro Tanzania

3. Department of Zoology, Entomology and Fisheries Science, Makerere University Uganda

4. Institute of Pest Management Centre, Sokoine University of Agriculture Morogoro Tanzania

5. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Busitema University Uganda

Abstract

A study aimed at assessing the structure of rodent and shrew assemblages inhabiting a degradation gradient while considering rainfall patterns, was conducted in one of few remaining lowland tropical forests in eastern Africa. We collected a unique dataset of rodents and shrews, representing 24 species (19 rodents, 5 shrews). The most abundant species alternated in dominance as species abundance significantly fluctuated across the study period following a degradation gradient. While only generalist species were observed near the degraded forest edge, habitat specialists such as Deomys ferrugineus, Malacomys longipes and Scutisorex congicus, were observed in the primary forest interior suggesting a significant association between species and their associated habitats and habitat attributes. There was also an observed correlation between rainfall patterns and species abundance. Capturing more species in adjacent fallows and along the degraded forest edge suggests that many species are able to live in degraded habitats that offer a variety of food resources. The study has highlighted the importance of habitat heterogeneity through species associations and also recommend an assessment of the effect of habitat homogeneity due to the proliferation of paper mulberry on small mammal community.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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