Abstract

Despite high fragmentation and deforestation, little is known about wildlife species richness and occurrence probabilities in tropical dry forest (TDF) landscapes. To fill this gap in knowledge, we used a Sentinel-2-derived land-cover map, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) data and a multi-species occupancy model to correct for detectability to assess the effect of landscape characteristics on medium and large mammal occurrence and richness in three TDF areas that differ in disturbance and seasonality in Ecuador. We recorded 15 species of medium and large mammals, distributed in 12 families; 1 species is critically Endangered, and 2 are Near-Threatened. The results indicate that species occupancy is related to low forest cover and high vegetation seasonality (i.e., high difference in NDVI between the wet and dry seasons). We believe that the apparent negative effect of forest cover is an indicator of species tolerance for disturbance. The three sampling areas varied from 98% to 40% forest cover, yet species richness and occupancy were not significantly different among them. Vegetation seasonality indicates that more seasonal forests (i.e., those where most tree species lose their leaves during the dry season) tend to have higher mammal species occupancy compared to less seasonal, semi-deciduous forests. Overall, occupancy did not vary between the dry and wet seasons, but species-specific data indicate that some species exhibit higher occupancy during the wet season. This research offers a good understanding of mammal species’ responses to habitat disturbance and fragmentation in TDFs and provides insights to promote their conservation.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, biodiversity is declining at very high rates and land-cover change is considered the main driver [1,2,3]

  • The relationship between land-cover changes and biodiversity loss is evident in tropical dry forests (TDFs) [4,5]

  • TDF formerly covered extensive areas of central coastal Ecuador, but most forests were cleared during the 1950s and areas of central coastal Ecuador, but most forests were cleared during the 1950s and 1960s

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Summary

Introduction

Biodiversity is declining at very high rates and land-cover change is considered the main driver [1,2,3]. The relationship between land-cover changes and biodiversity loss is evident in tropical dry forests (TDFs) [4,5]. The largest remnants of TDF are located in Latin America, a region where up to 40% of the original forest cover remains, and the region where estimated deforestation (1980 to 2000) in TDFs is the highest [5]. Despite these high deforestation trends, TDFs are not well represented in conservation efforts in Latin America [6,7].

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