Forest Fragments Surrounded by Sugar Cane Are More Inhospitable to Terrestrial Amphibian Abundance Than Fragments Surrounded by Pasture

Ribeiro Anunciação, Paula and Silva, Marcela Fernandes Vilela and Ferrante, Lucas and Assis, Diego Santana and Casagrande, Thamires and Coelho, Andréa Zalmora Garcia and Amâncio, Bárbara Christina Silva and Pereira, Túlio Ribeiral and da Silva, Vinícius Xavier (2013) Forest Fragments Surrounded by Sugar Cane Are More Inhospitable to Terrestrial Amphibian Abundance Than Fragments Surrounded by Pasture. International Journal of Ecology, 2013.

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

In recent years, there has been increasing interest in matrix-type influence on forest fragments. Terrestrial amphibians are good bioindicators for this kind of research because of low vagility and high philopatry. This study compared richness, abundance, and species composition of terrestrial amphibians through pitfall traps in two sets of semideciduous seasonal forest fragments in southeastern Brazil, according to the predominant surrounding matrix (sugar cane and pasture). There were no differences in richness, but fragments surrounded by sugar cane had the lowest abundance of amphibians, whereas fragments surrounded by pastures had greater abundance. The most abundant species, Rhinella ornata, showed no biometric differences between fragment groups but like many other amphibians sampled showed very low numbers of individuals in fragments dominated by sugar cane fields. Our data indicate that the sugar cane matrix negatively influences the community of amphibians present in fragments surrounded by this type of land use.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
International Journal of Ecology
ID Code:
234307
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
15 Dec 2025 14:00
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
16 Dec 2025 00:45