Authors
James J Gilroy, Graham W Prescott, Johann S Cardenas, Pamela González del Pliego Castañeda, Andrés Sánchez, Luis E Rojas‐Murcia, Claudia A Medina Uribe, Torbjørn Haugaasen, David P Edwards
Publication date
2015/4
Journal
Global change biology
Volume
21
Issue
4
Pages
1531-1540
Description
Oil palm agriculture is rapidly expanding in the Neotropics, at the expense of a range of natural and seminatural habitats. A key question is how this expansion should be managed to reduce negative impacts on biodiversity. Focusing on the Llanos of Colombia, a mixed grassland–forest system identified as a priority zone for future oil palm development, we survey communities of ants, dung beetles, birds and herpetofauna occurring in oil palm plantations and the other principal form of agriculture in the region – improved cattle pasture – together with those of surrounding natural forests. We show that oil palm plantations have similar or higher species richness across all four taxonomic groups than improved pasture. For dung beetles, species richness in oil palm was equal to that of forest, whereas the other three taxa had highest species richness in forests. Hierarchical modelling of species occupancy probabilities …
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Scholar articles
JJ Gilroy, GW Prescott, JS Cardenas, PGP Castañeda… - Global change biology, 2015