Functional diversity of snakes is explained by the landscape composition at multiple areas of influence

Author:

Rincón‐Aranguri Mónica12ORCID,Toro‐Cardona Felipe A.3,Galeano Sandra P.4,Roa‐Fuentes Lilia1,Urbina‐Cardona Nicolás1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Ecología y Territorio, Facultad de Estudios Ambientales y Rurales Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Bogotá Colombia

2. Grupo Herpetológico de Antioquia, Instituto de Biología Universidad de Antioquia Medellín Colombia

3. Grupo de Ecología y Evolución de Vertebrados, Instituto de Biología Universidad de Antioquia Medellín Colombia

4. Centro de Colecciones y Gestión de Especies Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos Alexander von Humboldt Villa de Leyva Colombia

Abstract

AbstractRoadkill and landscape composition affect snakes at different spatial scales, depending on the functional trait value of the species, which is reflected in the functional diversity indices at the assemblage level. This study evaluated the effect of roads and landscape composition on snakes' functional diversity at different areas of influence (250, 500, 1000, and 2000 m buffer areas). We compared roadkill snake species with those assemblages inhabiting the adjacent vegetation in the Orinoco region, Colombia. We surveyed snakes using transects on the road and adjacent areas on 13 landscapes along the road. We evaluated the effect of 16 landscape metrics at six land cover classes on the snake's functional diversity at four different areas of influence (from 250 to 2000 m around the sampled sites). The functional redundancy index was higher for roadkill species, suggesting that roads eliminate species that play similar roles in the assemblage and ecosystem processes. Likewise, the low values of functional redundancy in the adjacent vegetation call attention to the fact that each species surviving in this transformed landscape has a crucial active role in ecosystem processes in snake assemblages. For roadkill snakes, forest metrics explained changes in functional richness and functional evenness at a 250 m area of influence. In comparison, transient crop and pasture metrics explained changes in functional evenness and divergence at 2000 m. For snakes inhabiting the adjacent vegetation, the cohesion of pasture explained changes in functional richness at 250 m, and forest metrics explained changes in functional redundancy and evenness at 2000 m. Anthropogenic landscape transformation may have a greater effect on snake functional diversity at local scales than roadkill. In savanna ecosystems, the presence of native forest at 2000 m radius around roads promotes the conservation of snake assemblages. However, within a 250 m radius, the risk of snake roadkill increases when the road borders native forest. Therefore, it is necessary to implement wildlife crossing in these sections of the road.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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