Deforestation Thresholds for Phyllostomid Bat Populations in Tropical Landscapes in the Huasteca Region, Mexico

Author:

Ávila-Gómez Eva S.1,Moreno Claudia E.1,García-Morales Rodrigo12,Zuria Iriana1,Sánchez-Rojas Gerardo1,Briones-Salas Miguel3

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas, Instituto de Ciencias Básicas e Ingeniería, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo. Carretera Pachuca-Tulancingo km 4.5, C. P. 42184, Mineral de la Reforma, Hidalgo, México

2. Centro del Cambio Global y la Sustentabilidad en el Sureste A.C. Calle Centenario del Instituto Juárez s/n. Colonia Reforma, C. P. 86080, Villahermosa, Tabasco, México

3. Centro Interdisciplinario de Investigación para el Desarrollo Integral Regional, Unidad Oaxaca (CIIDIR-OAX), Instituto Politécnico Nacional. Hornos 1003, C. P. 71230, Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán, Oaxaca, México

Abstract

The loss and degradation of forests in tropical regions have modified tree cover, creating deforested landscapes. It has been suggested that there are thresholds in these landscapes beyond which the diversity, distribution, abundance, and fitness of different biological groups can be affected. In this study, the ecological habitat thresholds were detected for eight populations of phyllostomid bats along an environmental gradient of forest loss in the Huasteca region, Mexico. At a local scale, we analyzed canopy loss, and we also detected these thresholds at the landscape level, as a function of forest remnant area at three scales with radii of 1, 3 and 5 km. The data were analyzed using the Threshold Indicator Taxa ANalysis (TITAN) method for detecting indicator species along gradients. The bats exhibited three different types of response to habitat loss: 1) Leptonycteris yerbabuenae, Chiroderma salvini, Sturnira hondurensis, and Artibeus lituratus were more abundant where canopy cover was present at the local site, even though the landscape had been deforested; 2) Sturnira parvidens and Artibeus jamaicensis required tree cover at all spatial scales; and 3) Glossophaga soricina and Desmodus rotundus are species that might be locally abundant in habitats with little canopy, but both species need landscapes that have not been deforested. In conclusion, these populations of phyllostomid bats were sensitive to deforestation in different ways, their response to the habitat loss gradient varying among species and with spatial scale.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology

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