Where the small things are: Modelling edge effects on mouse lemur population density and distribution in northwestern Madagascar

Author:

Malabet Fernando Mercado1ORCID,Ramsay Malcolm1,Chell Coral1,Andriatsitohaina Bertrand23,Radespiel Ute4ORCID,Lehman Shawn1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Planet Madagascar Antananarivo Madagascar

3. Faculté des Sciences, de Technologies et de l'Environnement Université de Mahajanga Mahajanga Madagascar

4. Institute of Zoology University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover Hannover Germany

Abstract

AbstractEdge effects result from the penetration to varying depths and intensities, of abiotic and biotic conditions from the surrounding non‐forest matrix into the forest interior. Although 70% of the world's forests are within 1 km of a forest edge, making edge effects a dominant feature of most forest habitats, there are few empirical data on inter‐site differences in edge responses in primates. We used spatially explicit capture‐recapture (SECR) models to determine spatial patterns of density for two species of mouse lemurs (Microcebus murinus and Microcebus ravelobensis) in two forest landscapes in northwestern Madagascar. The goal of our study was to determine if mouse lemurs displayed spatially variable responses to edge effects. We trapped animals using Sherman live traps in the Mariarano Classified Forest (MCF) and in the Ambanjabe Forest Fragment Site (AFFS) site within Ankarafantsika National Park. We trapped 126 M. murinus and 79 M. ravelobensis at MCF and 78 M. murinus and 308 M. ravelobensis at AFFS. For M. murinus, our top model predicted a positive edge response, where density increased towards edge habitats. In M. ravelobensis, our top model predicted a negative edge response, where density was lower near the forest edges and increased towards the forest interior. At regional and landscape‐specific scales, SECR models estimated different density patterns between M. murinus and M. ravelobensis as a result of variation in edge distance. The spatial variability of our results using SECR models indicate the importance of studying the population ecology of primates at varying scales that are appropriate to the processes of interest. Our results lend further support to the theory that some lemurs exhibit a form of ecological flexibility in their responses to forest loss, forest fragmentation, and associated edge effects.

Funder

Idea Wild

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Sigma Xia

Primate Conservation

Publisher

Wiley

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