2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2007.11.010
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Forest fragment size effects on dung beetle communities?

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Cited by 8 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…A key conclusion from BDFFP research is that nature reserves in Amazonia should ideally be very large, on the order of thousands to tens of thousands of square kilometers in area (Laurance, ; Peres, ). Only at this size will they be likely to maintain natural ecological processes and sustain viable populations of the many rare and patchily distributed species in the region (Ferraz et al, ; Radtke et al, ). Such large reserves will also provide greater resilience from rare calamities such as droughts (Feldpausch et al, ) and intense storms (Laurance et al, ), facilitate persistence of terrestrial and aquatic animals that migrate seasonally (Bührnheim & Fernandes, ) and buffer the reserve from external threats such as fires, large‐scale forest desiccation and human encroachment (Cochrane & Laurance, ; Briant et al, ).…”
Section: Lessons For Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A key conclusion from BDFFP research is that nature reserves in Amazonia should ideally be very large, on the order of thousands to tens of thousands of square kilometers in area (Laurance, ; Peres, ). Only at this size will they be likely to maintain natural ecological processes and sustain viable populations of the many rare and patchily distributed species in the region (Ferraz et al, ; Radtke et al, ). Such large reserves will also provide greater resilience from rare calamities such as droughts (Feldpausch et al, ) and intense storms (Laurance et al, ), facilitate persistence of terrestrial and aquatic animals that migrate seasonally (Bührnheim & Fernandes, ) and buffer the reserve from external threats such as fires, large‐scale forest desiccation and human encroachment (Cochrane & Laurance, ; Briant et al, ).…”
Section: Lessons For Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Large reserves will also maximize forest carbon storage (Laurance et al, 1997, 1998 c ) and provide greater resilience to future climatic and atmospheric changes (Laurance, , ; Peres, ). Further, on the ancient, nutrient‐starved soils of central and eastern Amazonia, low plant productivity translates into low population densities of many animals, especially as one moves up the food chain, so reserves must be proportionately larger to harbour viable populations of these species (Radtke et al, ; Deichmann, Lima & Williamson, ; Deichmann et al, ). The recent observation that within‐species genetic variation of terrestrial vertebrates is higher in wilderness areas than in human‐disturbed habitats further underscores the value of large nature reserves for sustaining biological diversity and the capacity of species to adapt to future environmental insults (Miraldo et al, ).…”
Section: Lessons For Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This phenomenon is especially pronounced in the large expanses of the basin that overlay heavily weathered, nutrient-poor soils (e.g. Radtke et al 2008), where resources such as fruits, flowers, and nectar are scarce and plants are heavily defended against herbivore attack ).…”
Section: Sample Effects Are Important In Amazoniamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When possible, linear measurements were made on at least five individuals for each species using calipers accurate to 0.1 mm. We derived beetle volume from their length using the highly significant relationship (r 2 ¼ 0.92, P ¼ 0.0002, N ¼ 350) obtained by Radtke et al 2008) from Amazonian species. Dung and carrion beetles were also separated into four different functional groups based on methods of resource removal and diel activity (Slade et al 2007): diurnal tunnelers, diurnal rollers, nocturnal tunnelers, and nocturnal rollers.…”
Section: Beetle Assemblage Structurementioning
confidence: 99%