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Temporal patterns in Saturnidae (silk moth) and Sphingidae (hawk moth) assemblages in protected forests of central Uganda
Authors:Perpetra Akite  Richard J. Telford  Paul Waring  Anne M. Akol  Vigdis Vandvik
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda;2. Department of Biology, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway;3. Windall View, Werrington, Peterborough, UK
Abstract:Forest‐dependent biodiversity is threatened throughout the tropics by habitat loss and land‐use intensification of the matrix habitats. We resampled historic data on two moth families, known to play central roles in many ecosystem processes, to evaluate temporal changes in species richness and community structure in three protected forests in central Uganda in a rapidly changing matrix. Our results show some significant declines in the moth species richness and the relative abundance and richness of forest‐dependent species over the last 20–40 years. The observed changes in species richness and composition among different forests, ecological types, and moth groups highlight the need to repeatedly monitor biodiversity even within protected and relatively intact forests.
Keywords:Compositional change  extinction debt  forest degradation  Lepidoptera  matrix intensification  resampling  species decline
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