Published July 20, 2020
| Version v1
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Data from: Assessing avian diversity and community composition along a successional gradient in traditional Lacandon Maya agroforests
Authors/Creators
- 1. Cornell University
- 2. El Colegio de la Frontera Sur
- 3. SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Description
Evidence regarding the ability of agroforests to conserve
biological diversity has been mixed; they tend to maintain avian
communities with species richness similar to that of undisturbed forest
ecosystems but generally do not completely preserve community composition.
Using a combination of occupancy modeling and non-metric multidimensional
scaling on point-count data, we assessed changes in avian community
diversity and composition along a successional gradient in traditional
Lacandon Maya agroforests and compared them to protected areas in the
region. Bird species richness and diversity in Lacandon agroforests peaked
in early secondary forest stages. These agroforests' mean Shannon-Weiner
diversity was 5% higher than that of nearby protected areas, but their
species richness was similar. Community composition in Lacandon agroforests
changed throughout succession, with earlier stages supporting communities
distinctly characterized by generalist species, while subsequent,
less-intensively managed stages tended to support more forest-dwellers. The
bird community observed in even the most mature secondary forest stages in
Lacandon agroforests differed from that of undisturbed rainforest
ecosystems. These results demonstrate the potential of traditional Lacandon
agroforestry management to conserve avian biodiversity while ensuring food
sovereignty for farmers. However, because the community composition of
early successional stages was different than later stages, shortening
fallow cycles and reducing forest cover to increase agricultural production
will limit the species this system can support. This study illustrates the
value of incorporating traditional agroecosystems into conservation
planning as well as maintaining protected areas, because the latter serve
as refugia for species that require undisturbed forest habitat in an
agroecological matrix.
Notes
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