Authors
Robert J Fletcher Jr, Raphael K Didham, Cristina Banks-Leite, Jos Barlow, Robert M Ewers, James Rosindell, Robert D Holt, Andrew Gonzalez, Renata Pardini, Ellen I Damschen, Felipe PL Melo, Leslie Ries, Jayme A Prevedello, Teja Tscharntke, William F Laurance, Thomas Lovejoy, Nick M Haddad
Publication date
2018/10/1
Journal
Biological conservation
Volume
226
Pages
9-15
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Habitat loss is a primary threat to biodiversity across the planet, yet contentious debate has ensued on the importance of habitat fragmentation ‘per se’ (i.e., altered spatial configuration of habitat for a given amount of habitat loss). Based on a review of landscape-scale investigations, Fahrig (2017; Ecological responses to habitat fragmentation per se. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 48:1-23) reports that biodiversity responses to habitat fragmentation ‘per se’ are more often positive rather than negative and concludes that the widespread belief in negative fragmentation effects is a ‘zombie idea’. We show that Fahrig's conclusions are drawn from a narrow and potentially biased subset of available evidence, which ignore much of the observational, experimental and theoretical evidence for negative effects of altered habitat configuration. We therefore argue that Fahrig's conclusions should be …
Total citations
201820192020202120222023202466411211613511494
Scholar articles
RJ Fletcher Jr, RK Didham, C Banks-Leite, J Barlow… - Biological conservation, 2018