Abstract

The lemurs of Madagascar are among the most threatened mammalian taxa in the world, with habitat loss due to shifting cultivation and timber harvest heavily contributing to their precarious state. Deforestation often leads to fragmentation, resulting in mixed-habitat matrices throughout a landscape where disturbed areas are prone to invasion by exotic plants. Our study site, the Mandena littoral forest (southeast Madagascar), is a matrix of littoral forest, littoral swamp, and Melaleuca swamp habitats. Here, Melaleuca quinquenervia has invaded the wetland ecosystem, creating a mono-dominant habitat that currently provides the only potential habitat corridor between forest fragments. We sought to understand the role of this invasive Melaleuca swamp on the behavioral ecology of a threatened, small-bodied folivore, the southern bamboo lemur (Hapalemur meridionalis). We collected botanical and behavioral data on four groups of H. meridionalis between January and December 2013. Our results confirm Melaleuca swamp as an important part of their home range: while lemurs seasonally limited activities to certain habitats, all groups were capable of utilizing this invasive habitat for feeding and resting. Furthermore, the fact that Hapalemur use an invasive plant species as a dispersal corridor increases our knowledge of their ecological flexibility, and may be useful in the conservation management of remaining threatened populations.

Highlights

  • Deforestation within the tropics is one of the primary threats to global biodiversity [1, 2]

  • Our results show that H. meridionalis use the introduced stands of M. quinquenervia substantially

  • Examination of the monthly use of Melaleuca habitat by each group shows that while they spend less time here in the warmer months, they are capable of accessing this habitat when inundated

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Summary

Introduction

Deforestation within the tropics is one of the primary threats to global biodiversity [1, 2]. In addition to forest reduction, fragmentation results in extended edges that are often considered entirely distinct ecosystems from forest interiors [3]. Though fragments may persist after deforestation, most are unsuitable habitat for forest species [4, 5]. Within Madagascar, more than 80% of forest areas exist less than 1 km from an edge [6], fragmentation is of great. QIT Madagascar Minerals provided support in the form of salaries for authors [JBR, FR, LNA, DR, RR], but did not have any additional role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. The specific roles of these authors are articulated in the ‘author contributions’ section

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