Response of dung beetle diversity to remediation of soil ecosystems in the Ecuadorian Amazon

Author:

Pozo-Rivera Wilmer E.1,Quiloango-Chimarro Carlos12,Paredes Xavier1ORCID,Landívar Mario1,Chiriboga Carlos1,Hidalgo Daniel3ORCID,García Karina3ORCID,Villacís Jaime1

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida y de la Agricultura, Universidad de las Fuerzas Armadas (ESPE), Av. General Rumiñahui s/n, Sangolquí, Ecuador

2. Department of Biosystems Engineering, Universidade de São Paulo-USP, Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil

3. Centro de Investigación de Tecnologías Ambientales del Proyecto Amazonía Viva, Empresa Pública PETROECUADOR, La Joya de los Sachas, Orellana, Ecuador

Abstract

Background Efforts to alleviate the negative effects of oil spills in the Ecuadorian Amazon include remediation activities such as cleaning, reshaping, and revegetation of polluted areas. However, studies of the diversity of biological communities in these hydrocarbon-degraded ecosystems have never been carried out. Here, we evaluated the diversity of dung beetles on remediated soil ecosystems (Agricultural Soils and Sensitive Ecosystems) and on non-contaminated soils (Natural Forests and Palm Plantations). Methodology The study was conducted in Sucumbíos and Orellana provinces, in the Ecuadorian Amazon at four sampling sites per ecosystem type (a total of 16 sites). At each sampling site, six pitfall traps remained active for 120 consecutive h per month for 1 year. Results We collected 37 species and 7,506 individuals of dung beetles. We observed significant differences in mean species abundance, richness, and diversity between non-contaminated soil ecosystems and remediated soil ecosystems, with Natural Forests presenting the highest values, and Agricultural Soils the lowest values. Regarding sampling month, we also found significant differences among ecosystems, which were also higher in Natural Forests. Discussion The results suggest that hydrocarbon-degraded ecosystems tend to conserve lower beetle diversity one year after remediation highlighting the importance of Natural Forests for the conservation of tropical biodiversity. Therefore, dung beetle diversity could be used for future landscape management of these hydrocarbon-degraded ecosystems.

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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