SummaryForest edges influence more than half the world’s forests and
contribute to worldwide declines in biodiversity and ecosystem functions.
However, predicting these declines is challenging in heterogeneous fragmented
landscapes. We assembled an unmatched global dataset on species responses to
fragmentation and developed a new statistical approach for quantifying edge
impacts in heterogeneous landscapes to quantify edge-determined changes in
abundance of 1673 vertebrate species. We show that 85% of species’
abundances are affected, either positively or negatively, by forest edges.
Forest core species, which were more likely to be listed as threatened by the
IUCN, only reached peak abundances at sites farther than 200-400 m from sharp
high-contrast forest edges. Smaller-bodied amphibians, larger reptiles and
medium-sized non-volant mammals experienced a larger reduction in suitable
habitat than other forest core species. Our results highlight the pervasive
ability of forest edges to restructure ecological communities on a global
scale.
The PREDICTS project—Projecting Responses of Ecological Diversity In Changing Terrestrial Systems (www.predicts.org.uk)—has collated from published studies a large, reasonably representative database of comparable samples of biodiversity from multiple sites that differ in the nature or intensity of human impacts relating to land use. We have used this evidence base to develop global and regional statistical models of how local biodiversity responds to these measures. We describe and make freely available this 2016 release of the database, containing more than 3.2 million records sampled at over 26,000 locations and representing over 47,000 species. We outline how the database can help in answering a range of questions in ecology and conservation biology. To our knowledge, this is the largest and most geographically and taxonomically representative database of spatial comparisons of biodiversity that has been collated to date; it will be useful to researchers and international efforts wishing to model and understand the global status of biodiversity.
Decades of research suggest that species richness depends on spatial characteristics of habitat patches, especially their size and isolation. In contrast, the habitat amount hypothesis predicts that (1) species richness in plots of fixed size (species density) is more strongly and positively related to the amount of habitat around the plot than to patch size or isolation; (2) habitat amount better predicts species density than patch size and isolation combined, (3) there is no effect of habitat fragmentation per se on species density and (4) patch size and isolation effects do not become stronger with declining habitat amount. Data on eight taxonomic groups from 35 studies around the world support these predictions. Conserving species density requires minimising habitat loss, irrespective of the configuration of the patches in which that habitat is contained.
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