Abstract

Matrix land-use intensification is a relatively recent and novel landscape change that can have important influences on the biota within adjacent habitat patches. While there are immediate local changes that it brings about, the influences on individual animals occupying adjacent habitats may be less evident initially. High-intensity land use could induce chronic stress in individuals in nearby remnants, leading ultimately to population declines. We investigated how physiological indicators and body condition measures of tropical forest-dependent birds differ between forest adjacent to surface mining sites and that near farmlands at two distances from remnant edge in southwest Ghana. We used mixed effects models of several condition indices including residual body mass and heterophil to lymphocyte (H/L) ratios (an indicator of elevated chronic stress) to explore the effect of matrix intensity on forest-dependent passerines classed as either sedentary area-sensitive habitat specialists or nomadic generalists. Individual birds occupying tropical forest remnants near surface mining sites were in poorer condition, as indicated by lower residual body mass and elevated chronic stress, compared to those in remnants near agricultural lands. The condition of the sedentary forest habitat specialists white-tailed alethe, Alethe diademata and western olive sunbird, Cyanomitra obscura was most negatively affected by high-intensity surface mining land-use adjacent to remnants, whereas generalist species were not affected. Land use intensification may set in train a new trajectory of faunal relaxation beyond that expected based on habitat loss alone. Patterns of individual condition may be useful in identifying habitats where species population declines may occur before faunal relaxation has concluded.

Highlights

  • Matrix intensification, the replacement of lower-contrast matrices with high-contrast ones such as surface mining, is an increasingly common phenomenon in many tropical landscapes.PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0128521 June 24, 2015Matrix Intensification Affects Body and Physiological ConditionIt can directly and/or indirectly lead to habitat loss, fragmentation, pollution and loss of farmlands [1,2,3]

  • Our results suggest that increasing matrix intensity adjacent to native remnants could reduce the fitness of individuals occupying those remnants, leading to local population declines

  • Matrix type had an important influence on the two species of habitat specialists as indicated by lower residual mass and elevated chronic stress of birds trapped in remnants near surface mining sites

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Summary

Introduction

Matrix Intensification Affects Body and Physiological Condition. It can directly and/or indirectly lead to habitat loss, fragmentation, pollution and loss of farmlands [1,2,3]. Intensification of the landscape matrix can increase fragmentation impacts on wildlife communities within adjacent remnants [5,6], through reducing habitat resources, increasing edge effects, altering disturbance regimes, modifying microclimates, and increasing invasion and human pressures [5,7]. In particular, creates an inhospitable matrix that can impede dispersal through the landscape [8]. Such matrix intensification could present several environmental stressors, potentially resulting in negative long-term consequences for individuals, and potentially the local population to which they belong [9]

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