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Defaunation of large mammals alters understory vegetation and functional importance of invertebrates in an Afrotropical forest
Abstract
Hunting has reduced or eliminated large-bodied vertebrates in many areas across the
tropics, contributing to the global process of defaunation. Elucidating the ecological
consequences of hunting has important implications for managing ecosystems and for
our understanding of community and ecosystem ecology. We present data collected through
a combination of comparative and experimental approaches to assess how faunally-intact
and heavily-hunted forests in Gabon differ in understory vegetation structure, macroinvertebrate
fauna, ecological processes, and the relative importance of different taxa driving
those processes. Our results show that hunted sites had denser understory vegetation
and hosted approximately 170 times fewer termites compared to faunally-intact sites.
While web-building spiders were positively associated with understory vegetation density,
this effect did not translate to significantly higher abundances in heavily-hunted
forests. Additionally, the overall rates of decomposition, insectivory, and seed predation/removal
on the forest floor appeared robust to both defaunation and the associated increases
in understory vegetation density. However, our exclosure experiments revealed that
the contribution of invertebrates to decomposition was approximately 25% lower in
hunted sites compared to faunally-intact sites. Results suggest potential resilience
in this complex ecosystem such that microbial or other taxa not measured in this study
may compensate for the reduced functional contribution of invertebrates to decomposition.
However, while our results illustrate potential resilience, they also indicate that
indirect effects following defaunation, such as increases in the density of understory
vegetation, may alter invertebrate communities on the forest floor, with potential
consequences for the mechanisms, and therefore the dynamics, driving critical ecosystem
processes.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Science & TechnologyLife Sciences & Biomedicine
Biodiversity Conservation
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Biodiversity & Conservation
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Afrotropics
Defaunation
Ecosystem processes
Exclosure
Invertebrates
Tropical forest
Understory
SEED PREDATION
LITTER MANIPULATION
ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
SEASONAL-VARIATION
TERMITE DIVERSITY
SPIDER COMMUNITY
ABUNDANCE
DEER
DECOMPOSITION
CONSEQUENCES
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24955Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.biocon.2019.108329Publication Info
Lamperty, Therese; Zhu, Kai; Poulsen, John R; & Dunham, Amy E (2020). Defaunation of large mammals alters understory vegetation and functional importance
of invertebrates in an Afrotropical forest. Biological Conservation, 241. pp. 108329-108329. 10.1016/j.biocon.2019.108329. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24955.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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John Poulsen
Associate Professor of Tropical Ecology
John Poulsen is an ecologist with broad interests in the maintenance and regeneration
of tropical forests and conservation of biodiversity. His research has focused on
the effects of anthropogenic disturbance, such as logging and hunting, on forest structure
and diversity, abundance of tropical animals, and ecological processes. He has conducted
most of his research in Central Africa, where he has also worked as a conservation
manager, directing projects to sustainably manage natural resources i

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