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Ecological and biogeographical effects of forest disturbance on tropical butterflies of Sumba, Indonesia
Authors:K C Hamer  J K Hill    L A Lace  ‡ A M Langan  §
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Edinburgh Napier University, Colinton Road, Edinburgh EH10 5DT, U.K;Department of Pure and Applied Biology, Leeds University, Leeds LS2 9JT, U.K.;Department of Biological Sciences;Department of Environmental and Geographical Sciences, Manchester Metropolitan University, Chester Street. Manchester M1 5GD, U.K.
Abstract:ABSTRACT. Butterfly assemblages within lowland monsoon forest were compared at four sites on Sumba, Indonesia that differed in terms of protection and exhibited associated differences in levels of human disturbance. A numerical method employing principal components analysis was devised for describing forest structure at each site. The first principal component (PRIN1) grouped attributes tending towards dense forest with closely-spaced trees, a closed canopy and a poorly developed field layer, with trees that tended to be large with the point of inversion in the upper half of the trunk. The highest values for PRIN1 were recorded within protected forest, and PRIN1 values were considered to be a useful index of forest disturbance at each site. Species diversity of butterflies was highest in unprotected secondary forest, but was not affected by lower levels of disturbance. Those species occurring at highest density in secondary forest generally had wide geographical distributions, whereas those species occurring at highest density in undisturbed primary forest had restricted ranges of distribution, in most cases with a separate subspecies on Sumba. Overall, an index of biogeographical distinctiveness decreased with increasing disturbance, and this supports the hypothesis that the most characteristic species of undisturbed climax forest have the smallest geographical ranges of distribution. Species abundance data for butterflies fitted a log-normal distribution at all but the most disturbed site. These results indicate that the pattern of proportional abundance of tropical butterfly species may be used as an ‘instantaneous’ indicator of forest disturbance, and that changes in the structure of tropical forests in S.E. Asia resulting from human disturbance, even within partially-protected forest, may result in the presence of butterfly assemblages of higher species diversity but of lower biogeographical distinctiveness, and therefore of lower value in terms of the conservation of global biodiversity.
Keywords:Butterflies  rainforest  lowland monsoon forest  Indonesia  habitat preferences  disturbance  geographic range  conservation
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