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Bird diversity and endemism along a land‐use gradient in Madagascar: The conservation value of vanilla agroforests
Authors:Dominic Andreas Martin  Rouvah Andriafanomezantsoa  Saskia Drge  Kristina Osen  Eric Rakotomalala  Annemarie Wurz  Aristide Andrianarimisa  Holger Kreft
Institution:Dominic Andreas Martin,Rouvah Andriafanomezantsoa,Saskia Dröge,Kristina Osen,Eric Rakotomalala,Annemarie Wurz,Aristide Andrianarimisa,Holger Kreft
Abstract:Land‐use change is the most important driver of biodiversity loss worldwide and particularly so in the tropics, where natural habitats are transformed into large‐scale monocultures or heterogeneous landscape mosaics of largely unknown conservation value. Using birds as an indicator taxon, we evaluated the conservation value of a landscape mosaic in northeastern Madagascar, a biodiversity hotspot and the center of global vanilla production. We assessed bird species richness and composition by conducting point counts across seven prevalent land‐use types (forest‐ and fallow‐derived vanilla agroforests, woody and herbaceous fallow that are part of a shifting cultivation system, rice paddy, forest fragment and contiguous old‐growth forest). We find that old‐growth forest had the highest species richness, driven by a high share of endemics. Species richness and community composition in forest‐derived vanilla agroforest were similar to forest fragment, whereas fallow‐derived vanilla agroforest was most comparable to woody fallow. The open land‐use types herbaceous fallow and rice paddy had fewest species. Across forest fragments, vanilla agroforests, and woody fallows, endemic bird species richness was positively correlated to landscape‐scale forest cover. We conclude that both fallow‐ and forest‐derived vanilla agroforests play an important but contrasting role for bird conservation: Fallow‐derived agroforests are less valuable but take fallow land out of the shifting cultivation cycle, possibly preventing further degradation. Conversely, forest‐derived agroforests contribute to forest degradation but may avoid total loss of tree cover from forest fragments. Considering the land‐use history of agroforests may thus be a promising avenue for future research beyond the case of vanilla. Abstract in Malagasay is available with online material
Keywords:voly miharo ala  tontolo voajanahary  fampiasana ny tany  vorona  voly tavy  Faritra SAVA  agroecology  agroforestry  biodiversity  land‐use history  land‐use change  ornithology  shifting cultivation  SAVA region
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