Effects of reduced-impact logging on medium and large-bodied forest vertebrates in eastern Amazonia

Bibliographic Details
Title: Effects of reduced-impact logging on medium and large-bodied forest vertebrates in eastern Amazonia
Authors: Laufer, Juliana, Michalski, Fernanda, Peres, Carlos A.
Source: Biota Neotropica. January 2015 15(2)
Publisher Information: Instituto Virtual da Biodiversidade | BIOTA - FAPESP, 2015.
Publication Year: 2015
Subject Terms: fauna, forest management, tropical rainforest, mammals, birds
More Details: Standard line-transect census techniques were deployed to generate a checklist and quantify the abundance of medium and large-bodied vertebrate species in forest areas of eastern Amazonia with and without a history of reduced-impact logging (RIL). Three areas were allocated a total of 1,196.9 km of line-transect census effort. Sampling was conducted from April to June 2012 and from April to August 2013, and detected 29 forest vertebrate species considered in this study belonging to 15 orders, 20 families and 28 genera. Additionally, eight species were recorded outside census walks through direct and indirect observations. Of this total, six species are considered vulnerable according to IUCN (Ateles paniscus, Myrmecophaga tridactyla, Priodontes maximus, Tapirus terrestris, Tayassu peccary, Chelonoidis denticulata). Observed species richness ranged from 21 to 24 species in logged and unlogged areas, and encounter rates along transects were highly variable between treatments. However, the relative abundance of species per transect did not differ between transects in logged and unlogged forests. Of the species detected during censuses, only three showed different relative abundance between the two treatments (Saguinus midas, Tinamus spp. and Dasyprocta leporina). Our results show that the effect of RIL forest management was a relatively unimportant determinant of population abundance for most medium and large vertebrates over the time period of the survey.
Document Type: article
File Description: text/html
Language: English
ISSN: 1676-0603
DOI: 10.1590/1676-06032015013114
Access URL: http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1676-06032015000200202
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number: edssci.S1676.06032015000200202
Database: SciELO
More Details
ISSN:16760603
DOI:10.1590/1676-06032015013114
Published in:Biota Neotropica
Language:English