Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/jspui/handle/123456789/11052
Title: Microhabitat structure and food availability modelling a small mammal assemblage in restored riparian forest remnants.
Authors: Corrêa, Matheus Rocha Jorge
Bellagamba, Yuri Macfadem
Magalhães, Adriele Prisca de
Martins, Joice Paiva Vidigal
Cruz, Antônio Jorge do Rosário
Kozovits, Alessandra Rodrigues
Messias, Maria Cristina Teixeira Braga
Azevedo, Cristiano Schetini de
Keywords: Conservation
Fragmentation
Litter
Marsupials
Roden
Issue Date: 2017
Citation: CORRÊA, M. R. J. et al. Microhabitat structure and food availability modelling a small mammal assemblage in restored riparian forest remnants. Mammalia, v. 82, p. 315-327, 2018. Disponível em: <https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/mamm.ahead-of-print/mammalia-2017-0026/mammalia-2017-0026.xml>. Acesso em: 11 fev. 2019.
Abstract: Small mammal populations respond to environmental changes in secondary riparian forest remnants in different ways, depending on the influences of biotic and abiotic variables. The present study evaluated how habitat/ microhabitat structure and food availability influence small mammal assemblages in restored riparian forest remnants. Pitfall traps disposed in three linear transects were used to collect small mammals during 9 months of field work. General linear models were built to test the hypothesis that microhabitat structure (litter biomass and type – leaves and branches) and food availability (richness of zoochoric tree species and arthropods) influence species richness and abundance of small mammals. Three hundred and eighty-two individuals belonging to 14 species were captured. Biomass and type of litter (leaves or branches) provided greater structural to microhabitats, allowing the coexistence of morphologically similar species. Besides, food availability influenced foraging strategies of marsupials, forcing them to use the forest floor when zoochoric plants were rare. Thus, litter structure and food availability, allowing spatial segregation of the small mammal species using the forest fragments. We concluded that the maintenance of small mammals and their ecosystem services in restored riparian forests are dependent on habitat structure and food availability, thus, litter and zoochoric plants should be conserved in riparian forest fragments, especially those reforested.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/handle/123456789/11052
metadata.dc.identifier.uri2: https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/mamm.ahead-of-print/mammalia-2017-0026/mammalia-2017-0026.xml
ISSN: 18641547
Appears in Collections:DEBIO - Artigos publicados em periódicos

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