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Recovery of mammal diversity in tropical forests: a functional approach to measuring restoration
Authors:Mia A. Derhé  Helen T. Murphy  Noel D. Preece  Michael J. Lawes  Rosa Menéndez
Affiliation:1. Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Bailrigg, Lancaster, U.K.;2. Tropical Forest Research Centre, CSIRO, PO Box 780, Atherton, Queensland, Australia;3. Present address: Karisoke Research Centre, The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International, NR 4 RD 58, B.P. 105, Ruhengeri/Musanze, Rwanda;4. Centre for Tropical Environmental and Sustainability Science, College of Marine & Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia;5. Biome5 Pty Ltd., PO Box 1200, Atherton, Queensland, Australia;6. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Abstract:Ecological restoration is increasingly applied in tropical forests to mitigate biodiversity loss and recover ecosystem functions. In restoration ecology, functional richness, rather than species richness, often determines community assembly, and measures of functional diversity provide a mechanistic link between diversity and ecological functioning of restored habitat. Vertebrate animals are important for ecosystem functioning. Here, we examine the functional diversity of small‐to‐medium sized mammals to evaluate the diversity and functional recovery of tropical rainforest. We assess how mammal species diversity and composition and functional diversity and composition, vary along a restoration chronosequence from degraded pasture to “old‐growth” tropical rainforest in the Wet Tropics of Australia. Species richness, diversity, evenness, and abundance did not vary, but total mammal biomass and mean species body mass increased with restoration age. Species composition in restoration forests converged on the composition of old‐growth rainforest and diverged from pasture with increasing restoration age. Functional metrics provided a clearer pattern of recovery than traditional species metrics, with most functional metrics significantly increasing with restoration age when taxonomic‐based metrics did not. Functional evenness and dispersion increased significantly with restoration age, suggesting that niche complementarity enhances species' abundances in restored sites. The change in community composition represented a functional shift from invasive, herbivorous, terrestrial habitat generalists and open environment specialists in pasture and young restoration sites, to predominantly endemic, folivorous, arboreal, and fossorial forest species in older restoration sites. This shift has positive implications for conservation and demonstrates the potential of tropical forest restoration to recover rainforest‐like, diverse faunal communities.
Keywords:Australia  ecological restoration  ecosystem functioning  functional guilds  rainforest  wet tropics
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