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1.
PLoS One ; 18(9): e0291234, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37682943

RESUMEN

Large forested tracts are increasingly rare in the tropics, where conservation managers are often presented with the challenge of preserving biodiversity in small and isolated fragments. The Atlantic Forest is one of the world's most important biodiversity hotspots, jeopardized by habitat loss and fragmentation. The Pernambuco Endemism Center (PEC) is the most degraded of the Atlantic Forest regions and because of the dramatic levels of deforestation, fragmentation, and ongoing species losses, studies on the distribution and configuration of the PEC's forest cover are necessary. However, across dynamic tropical landscapes, investigating changes over time is essential because it may reveal trends in forest quality attributes. Here, we used Google Earth Engine to assess land use and land cover data from MapBiomas ranging from 1985 to 2020 to calculate current landscape metrics and to reveal for the first time the spatiotemporal dynamics of the PEC's forests. We identified a forest cover area that ranged from 571,661 ha in 1985 to 539,877 ha in 2020, and about 90% of the fragments were smaller than 10 ha. The average fragment size was about 11 ha, and only four fragments had more than 5,000 ha. Deforestation was mostly concentrated in northern Alagoas, southern Pernambuco, and non-coastal Paraíba and Rio Grande do Norte. On average, borders represented 53.6% of the forests from 1985 to 2020, and younger forests covered 52.3% of the area in 2017, revealing a vegetation rejuvenation process 2.5 times higher than in total Atlantic Forest. In 2017, older forest cores in fragments larger than 1000 ha (i.e., higher-quality habitats) represented only 12% of the remaining forests. We recommend that the amount of forest cover alone may poorly assist conservation managers, and our results indicate that ensuring legal protection and increasing surveillance of the PEC's few last higher-quality habitats is urgently needed.


Asunto(s)
Bosques , Rejuvenecimiento , Brasil , Benchmarking , Biodiversidad
2.
Biota Neotrop. (Online, Ed. ingl.) ; 22(3): e20221361, 2022. tab, graf
Artículo en Inglés | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1403617

RESUMEN

Abstract Determining the relative risks of extinction of declining taxa is important to delineate conservation priorities and to guide the investments in conservation. Brazil concentrates the greatest number of endangered avian taxa on Earth, yet demographic information is lacking for most of them. Here we present distance-sampling population density estimates for three endangered bird taxa endemic to the Pernambuco Endemism Center (PEC), the most critically disturbed Atlantic Forest region. The analyzed taxa were the White-shouldered Antshrike Thamnophilus aetiops distans (Endangered), the Brown-winged Mourner Schiffornis turdina intermedia (Vulnerable), and the White-bellied Tody-tyrant Hemitriccus griseipectus naumburgae (Vulnerable). The estimated numbers of individuals/ha in an approximately 1,000 ha forest fragment were 0.21, 0.14, and 0.73, respectively. Our findings corroborated the premise that even taxa classified in similar threat categories based on habitat characteristics alone can have different population densities and consequently, divergent risks of extinction. Although population densities can vary among fragments, the extrapolation of our data to the whole PEC confirmed the Vulnerable status of the Brown-winged Mourner, and indicated the Vulnerable and Least Concern categories for the White-shouldered Antshrike and for the White-bellied Tody-tyrant, suggesting that for the two later taxa, the current classifications (Endangered and Vulnerable) based on their Areas of Occupancy must prevail.


Resumo A determinação dos riscos relativos de extinção dos táxons ameaçados é importante para o delineamento de ações de recuperação e para o direcionamento dos investimentos em conservação. O Brasil é o país que possui o maior número de táxons ameaçados de aves, no entanto, informações sobre aspectos demográficos são inexistentes para a maioria deles. Neste trabalho são apresentadas estimativas de densidades populacionais, baseadas no método de amostragem por distância, para três táxons ameaçados de extinção endêmicos do Centro de Endemismo Pernambuco (CEP), a região mais degradada de toda a Mata Atlântica. Os táxons analisados foram a choca-lisa Thamnophilus aetiops distans (Ameaçada), o flautim-marrom Schiffornis turdina intermedia (Vulnerável) e a maria-de-barriga-branca Hemitriccus griseipectus naumburgae (Vulnerável). Os números de indivíduos/ha estimados para um fragmento de floresta de aproximadamente 1000 ha foram respectivamente 0,21, 0,14 e 0,73. Com isto, foi possível confirmar a premissa de que mesmo táxons classificados em uma mesma categoria de ameaça com base apenas em informações de hábitats podem possuir densidades populacionais bastante divergentes e portanto diferentes graus de riscos de extinção. Embora as densidades populacionais possam variar entre fragmentos, a extrapolação destes dados para toda a área do CEP confirmou a classificação de Vulnerável para o flautim-marrom e indicou as categorias Vulnerável e Pouco Preocupante para a choca-lisa e para a maria-de-barriga-branca, sugerindo que para as duas últimas, as classificações atuais baseadas nos tamanhos das suas Áreas de Ocupação (Ameaçada e Vulnerável) devem prevalecer.

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