Abstract

Ecological restoration attempts to recover the structure and function of ecosystems that have been degraded by human activities. A crucial test of ecosystem recovery would be to determine whether individuals in restored environments are as healthy as those in conserved environments. However, the impact of restoration on physiology of terrestrial animals has never been tested. Here, we evaluated the effect of two restoration methods on body condition measured as body size, body mass, lipid and muscle content of the spider Nephila clavipes in a tropical dry forest that has suffered chronic disturbance due to cattle grazing. We used experimental plots that had been excluded from disturbance by cattle grazing during eight years. Plots were either planted with native trees (i. e. maximal intervention), or only excluded from disturbance (i. e. minimal intervention), and were compared with control conserved (remnants of original forest) and disturbed plots (where cattle is allowed to graze). We predicted (1) better body condition in spiders of conserved and restored sites, compared to disturbed sites, and (2) better body condition in plots with maximal intervention than in plots with minimal intervention. The first prediction was not supported in males or females, and the second prediction was only supported in females: body dry mass was higher in planted than in conserved plots for spiders of both sexes and also higher that in disturbed plots for males, suggesting that plantings are providing more resources. We discuss how different life histories and environmental pressures, such as food availability, parasitism, and competition for resources can explain our contrasting findings in male and female spiders. By studying animal physiology in restoration experiments it is possible to understand the mechanistic basis of ecological and evolutionary processes that determine success of ecological restoration.

Highlights

  • When a forest is degraded by human activities, ecological restoration is the most promising strategy to recover its structural and functional integrity [Society of Ecological Restoration, PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0133551 July 30, 2015Spider Physiological Responses to Restoration2004; http://www.ser.org; [1]]

  • The only way to deduce the causes of success or failure of a restoration program, and to determine the best restoration methods is by carrying out experiments in which different restoration treatments are tested simultaneously in replicated plots [4,5,6,7]

  • In the present study we evaluated the effect of two levels of intervention in restoration: minimal and maximal intervention on the body condition of a generalist predator, the native golden orb-web spider, Nephila clavipes, in a tropical dry forest of Mexico

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Summary

Introduction

When a forest is degraded by human activities, ecological restoration is the most promising strategy to recover its structural and functional integrity [Society of Ecological Restoration, PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0133551 July 30, 2015Spider Physiological Responses to Restoration2004; http://www.ser.org; [1]]. Restoration can include minimal intervention, when the disturbing agent is detected and eliminated to allow natural succession to take place, or maximal intervention, when practitioners introduce native tree species in plantings [2]. Different levels of intervention to restore ecosystems can be successful and cost effective [3]. Many ecological restoration programs employ trial and error reforestation techniques to attempt to re-create lost habitats [4]. The only way to deduce the causes of success or failure of a restoration program, and to determine the best restoration methods is by carrying out experiments in which different restoration treatments are tested simultaneously in replicated plots [4,5,6,7]

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