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Small-scale variability in a mosaic tropical rainforest influences habitat use of long-tailed macaques
Authors:John Chih Mun Sha  Siew Chin Chua  Ping Ting Chew  Hassan Ibrahim  Hock Keong Lua  Tze Kwan Fung  Peng Zhang
Institution:1.School of Sociology and Anthropology,Sun Yat-Sen University,Guangzhou,China;2.Ridge View Residential College,National University of Singapore,Singapore,Singapore;3.National Parks Board,Singapore,Singapore;4.School of Biological Sciences,National University of Singapore,Singapore,Singapore
Abstract:Pristine habitats have generally been considered to be the most important ecological resource for wildlife conservation, but due to forest degradation caused by human activities, mosaics of secondary forests have become increasingly prominent. We studied three forest types in a mosaic tropical forest consisting of short secondary forest (SS), tall secondary forest (TS) and freshwater swamp forest (SF). These forests differed in stand structure and floristic composition, as well as phenological productivity of fruits, flowers and young leaves. We examined habitat use of long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) in relation to indices of phenological activity. The macaques used the SS for feeding/foraging more than the TS and the SF. This was because the SS had higher productivity of fruit, which is a preferred food resource for macaques. Stem densities of young leaves in the SS and the TS also influenced habitat use, as they provided more clumped resources. Use of SF was limited, but these forests provided more species-rich resources. Our results showed that M. fascicularis responded to small-scale variability in phenological activity between forest types found in a heterogeneous mosaic forest, with young secondary regrowth forests likely providing the most important food resources. Mosaic landscapes may be important as they can buffer the effects of temporal food resource variability in any given forest type. In our increasingly human-altered landscapes, a better understanding of the role of secondary forest mosaics is crucial to the conservation and management of wildlife habitats and the animals they support.
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