Abstract
AbstractLarge expanses of tropical rainforest have been converted into agricultural landscapes cultivated by smallholder farmers. This is also the case in north-eastern Madagascar; a region that retains significant proportions of forest cover despite slash-and-burn hill rice cultivation and vanilla agroforestry expansion. The region is also a global hotspot for herpetofauna diversity, but how amphibians and reptiles are affected by land-use change remains largely unknown. Using a space-for-time study design, we compared species diversity and community composition across seven prevalent land uses: unburned (old-growth forest, forest fragment, and forest-derived vanilla agroforest) and burned (fallow-derived vanilla agroforest, woody fallow, and herbaceous fallow) land-use types, and rice paddy. We conducted six comprehensive, time-standardized searches across at least ten replicates of each land-use type and applied genetic barcoding to confirm species identification. We documented an exceptional diversity of herpetofauna (119 species; 91% endemic). Plot-level amphibian species richness was significantly higher in old-growth forest than in all other land-use types. Plot-level reptile species richness was significantly higher in unburned land-use types compared to burned land-use types. For both amphibians and reptiles, the less-disturbed land-use types showed more uneven communities and the species composition in old-growth forest differed significantly from all other land-use types. Amphibians had higher forest dependency (38% of species occurred exclusively in old-growth forest) than reptiles (26%). Our analyses thus revealed that the two groups respond differently to land-use change: we found less pronounced losses of reptile species richness especially in unburned agricultural habitats, suggesting that reptiles are less susceptible to land-use change than amphibians, possibly due to their ability to cope with hotter and drier microclimates. Overall, old-growth forest harboured a unique diversity, but some species also thrived in vanilla agroforestry systems, especially if these were forest-derived. This highlights the importance of conserving old-growth forests and non-burned land-use types within agricultural landscapes.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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