Affiliation: | (1) Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, P.O. Box 90328, 27708 Durham, NC, USA;(2) Departamento de Estudios Ambientales, Universidad de Simon Bolivar, 89000 Apartado, Caracas, Venezuela;(3) Fellow, Environmental Studies Group, Council for Social Development, Sangha Rachna, 53, Lodhi Estate, 110003 New Delhi, India |
Abstract: | Insects exhibit a variety of population-level responses to forest fragmentation, ranging from population increase to extinction. However, the biological attributes that underlie differences in extinction vulnerability among insects have been little-studied. Using the frugivorous butterfly community of tropical dry forest in Venezuela, we studied body size, population density and colonization ability as attributes that might underlie the range of responses of insects to forest fragmentation. The study was carried out in a set of forest fragments in the reservoir Lago Guri, formed by the damming of the Caroni River in eastern Venezuela. Results show that larger butterfly species were more vulnerable to extinction from habitat fragments than smaller ones. Rarer species were not more vulnerable to extinction, showing that rarity may not be an important correlate of vulnerability to extinction amongst insects. Contrary to expectation, faster-flying species were more and not less vulnerable to extinction from small habitat fragments. We speculate on the possible reasons for the observed patterns in extinction vulnerability using additional observations on behavioural patterns and larval host plant distributions of some of the butterfly species. |