Consequências da perda e fragmentação de habitat em morcegos

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2015-06-08

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Universidade Federal de Goiás

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Our aim was to explore some components of bat responses to land-use changes. Bats were sampled in 18 forest patches during four nights. Landscapes were delimited with 500 meter to 10km radius from sample site. We took metrics of two different landscape components: natural vegetation amount and fragmentation (measured as number of patches). In the first chapter we tested the effect of such components in total abundance, species richness and variance in biological traits of bats. In the second chapter we verified if those variables were more important than local ones to determine occupancy probability of eight bat species. Local variables were tree density, understory height, liana quantity, and canopy cover. In the third chapter we counterposed species climatic suitable areas with spatial data about habitat loss and fragmentation in Cerrado. We predicted species vulnerability creating scenarios in which they were sensitive to habitat loss and/or fragmentation, furthermore we showed an overview of species suitable areas exposure to land-use changes to eight bat species. We observed idiosyncratic patterns of responses to habitat loss and fragmentation in bats. Abundance is positively related to habitat amount, whereas species richness, variance in body mass and number of guilds is negatively related to fragmentation. Occupancy probability of Sturnira lilium is positively related to habitat amount, whereas occupancy probability of Myotis nigricans is negatively related to fragmentation. Six other species did not show any clear relationship between occupancy and landscape structure. South areas of Cerrado are locales with higher climatic suitability, while still having higher exposure level to land-use changes. Our results strengthen the view that species response patterns to habitat loss and fragmentation are species-specific and also diversity metric specific. Such assertion reinforces that it is necessary an improvement in knowledge about factors that determine those responses, however it does not mean that the development of regional conservation strategies is unfeasible when using the current available knowledge in literature.

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MENDES, P. Consequências da perda e fragmentação de habitat em morcegos. 2015. 128 f. Tese (Doutorado em Ecologia e Evolução) - Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, 2015.