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https://repositorio.icmbio.gov.br/handle/cecav/1182
Título : | Inside or out? Cave size and landscape effects on cave-roosting bat assemblages in Brazilian Caatinga caves |
Autor : | Carlos Vargas-Mena, Juan Cordero-Schmidt, Eugenia Rodriguez-Herrera, Bernal A. Medellín, Rodrigo de Medeiros Bento, Diego M. Venticinque, Eduardo Jorge Ortega |
Palabras clave : | structure;vampire bat;cave connectivity;Chiroptera;dry forest;karst;livestock;richness;species composition |
Fecha de publicación : | 8-abr-2020 |
Resumen : | Cave bats have an intimate association with their roosts. Size, structural heterogeneity, and microclimatic conditions are traits of caves known to affect the structure of these assemblages. The effects of the natural and anthropogenic landscape factors around caves on the structure of these assemblages are poorly known, especially in areas with large cave clusters. We assessed the effects of cave size and surrounding landscape attributes on the richness and species composition of cave-roosting bats in 13 caves distributed in two landscapes with large cave clusters in Caatinga dry forests, Brazil. In a 1-km buffer around caves, we obtained 13 internal cave and external landscape variables. Candidate univariate models using generalized linear models were constructed and the Akaike information criterion was used for model selection. The cave size model explained richness and variance in the species composition; larger caves tended to have greater richness and assemblage composition varied depending on the cave size, hence affecting the occurrence of certain species, some of conservation concern (Natalus macrourus, Furipterus horrens). The cave connectivity model affected only the richness; caves located in denser cave clusters had higher richness likely attributed to movement of bats among caves by a more diverse array of species. Both environmental and anthropic variables affected species composition, but differently depending of the landscape context of cave location (protected versus nonprotected area). The extent these landscape variables affected the species composition was due to species-specific responses, and observed in the mean colony sizes of the species shared between the cave systems. All the landscape variables that we tested affected the structuring process of cave-roosting bats assemblages, and evidences that variables found in disturbed karstic landscapes also affect the structure of the assemblage (e.g., large colonies of vampire bats). However, the ubiquitous effect of cave size on both richness and species composition reinforces the critical importance of the roost in the life of these flying mammals. |
metadata.dc.source: | Journal of Mammalogy |
metadata.dc.type: | Texto publicado em jornal |
metadata.dc.totalpage: | 11 |
metadata.dc.localofdeposit: | https://academic.oup.com/jmammal/article/101/2/464/5717589?login=true |
URI : | https://repositorio.icmbio.gov.br/handle/cecav/1182 |
Aparece en las colecciones: | BIOLOGIA SUBTERRÂNEA |
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