Can oil palm plantations be made more hospitable for forest butterflies and birds?

被引:130
作者
Koh, Lian Pin [1 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
关键词
agriculture; biodiversity hotspots; bird; Borneo; butterfly; conservation; reconciliation ecology; restoration ecology; Southeast Asia;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2664.2008.01491.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
1. Rising global demand for palm oil is likely to exacerbate deforestation rates in oil palm-producing countries. This will lead to a net reduction in biodiversity unless measures can be taken to improve the value of oil palm plantations. 2. Here, I investigate whether the biodiversity of oil palm plantations can be increased by determining how forest-dwelling butterflies and birds in these plantations are affected by vegetation characteristics at the local level (e.g. epiphyte prevalence) and by natural forest cover at the landscape level (e.g. old-growth forests surrounding oil palm estates). 3. Across transects, vegetation variables explained 0-1.2% of the variation in butterfly species richness and 0-7% of that in bird species richness. The most important predictors of species richness across transects were percentage ground cover of weeds for butterflies; and epiphyte prevalence and presence of leguminous crops for birds. Across estates, natural forest cover explained 1.2-12.9% of the variation in butterfly species richness and 0.6-53.3% of variation in bird species richness. The most important predictors of species richness across estates were percentage cover of old-growth forests surrounding an estate for butterflies; and percentage cover of young secondary forests surrounding an estate for birds. 4. Synthesis and applications. In order to maximize biodiversity in oil palm plantations, oil palm companies and local governments should work together to preserve as much of the remaining natural forests as possible by, for example, creating forested buffer zones around oil palm estates or protecting remnant forest patches in the landscape.
引用
收藏
页码:1002 / 1009
页数:8
相关论文
共 67 条
[1]   COMPONENTS OF DIVERSITY [J].
ALLAN, JD .
OECOLOGIA, 1975, 18 (04) :359-367
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2000, HESITANT BOOM INDONE
[3]   Geographic range, turnover rate and the scaling of species diversity [J].
Arita, HT ;
Rodríguez, P .
ECOGRAPHY, 2002, 25 (05) :541-550
[4]   Impacts of rain forest fragmentation on butterflies in northern Borneo: species richness, turnover and the value of small fragments [J].
Benedick, S. ;
Hill, J. K. ;
Mustaffa, N. ;
Chey, V. K. ;
Maryati, M. ;
Searle, J. B. ;
Schilthuizen, M. ;
Hamer, K. C. .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2006, 43 (05) :967-977
[5]  
Burnham K. P., 2002, A practical informationtheoretic approach, DOI [DOI 10.1007/B97636, 10.1007/b97636]
[6]   Multimodel inference - understanding AIC and BIC in model selection [J].
Burnham, KP ;
Anderson, DR .
SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS & RESEARCH, 2004, 33 (02) :261-304
[7]   Modified Pollard transects for assessing tropical butterfly abundance and diversity [J].
Caldas, A ;
Robbins, RK .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2003, 110 (02) :211-219
[8]   Additive partitioning of diversity across hierarchical spatial scales in a forested landscape [J].
Chandy, Shibi ;
Gibson, David J. ;
Robertson, Philip A. .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2006, 43 (04) :792-801
[9]  
Chao A., 2005, Encyclopedia of Statistical Sciences, pages, P7907
[10]  
Chazdon RL, 1998, MAN BIOSPH, V20, P285