2005
DOI: 10.1017/s0266467405002695
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Impact of habitat disturbance on the distribution of endemic species of small mammals and birds in a tropical rain forest in Sri Lanka

Abstract: We tested whether species endemic to Sri Lanka were less able than non-endemics to tolerate disturbed habitats. Small mammals were surveyed in four habitat types along a disturbance gradient (unlogged forest, selectively logged forest, cultivated areas and areas abandoned after cultivation) within and around the Sinharaja rain forest in south-west Sri Lanka. Twenty 90-m×40-m plots were live trapped in each of these habitat types. Twelve taxa: nine rodents (Srilankamys ohiensis, Rattus rattus kelaarti, R. r. ka… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Table 1. The mammal, reptile and amphibian species that occur in Sri Lanka and are assessed as Critically Endangered (CR) or Endangered (EN) in the IUCN (2012) Red List, indicating records from old-growth (▲) and secondary (∆) forests: data from www.iucnredlist.org; Goonewardene et al (2006), Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda ( , 2007, Meegaskumbura and Manamendra-Arachchi (2005), Meegaskumbura et al (2009), Wijesinghe and Brooke (2005), the reference collection of the Wildlife Heritage Trust at the National Museum, Colombo; and personal observations. Bubalus arnee (EN), though listed from Sri Lanka, is unlikely to occur there (Hedges et al, 2008); ‗Raorchestes' viridis is a Pseudophilautus.…”
Section: Despite Continued Forest Conversion and Degradation Forest mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 1. The mammal, reptile and amphibian species that occur in Sri Lanka and are assessed as Critically Endangered (CR) or Endangered (EN) in the IUCN (2012) Red List, indicating records from old-growth (▲) and secondary (∆) forests: data from www.iucnredlist.org; Goonewardene et al (2006), Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda ( , 2007, Meegaskumbura and Manamendra-Arachchi (2005), Meegaskumbura et al (2009), Wijesinghe and Brooke (2005), the reference collection of the Wildlife Heritage Trust at the National Museum, Colombo; and personal observations. Bubalus arnee (EN), though listed from Sri Lanka, is unlikely to occur there (Hedges et al, 2008); ‗Raorchestes' viridis is a Pseudophilautus.…”
Section: Despite Continued Forest Conversion and Degradation Forest mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, the wet-zone toque macaque (M. s. aurifons) was rare inside forested areas, but was common at the forest peripheries in keeping with its ecological adaptation to "edge" habitats (Richard et al, 1989). Wijesinghe and Brooke (2005) and Wijesinghe (2012) have pointed out, however, that habitat disturbance, as occurs on forest edges, negatively impacts the small bodied mammal endemic niche specialists more than the non-endemic ones and may lead to a shift in faunal composition in such areas. The endangered endemic leopard (Panthera pardus kotiya) is the apex predator in Sri Lanka and its survival is best served by large extents of PAs of natural forest and protected corridors of vegetation connecting smaller areas (Kittle et al 2014(Kittle et al , 2017.…”
Section: What Once There Wasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The forest was designated a Biosphere Reserve under UNESCO's Global Network of Biosphere Reserves. Subsequently, UNESCO declared it a Natural World Heritage Site (Wijesinghe & Brooke 2005).…”
Section: Study Sitesmentioning
confidence: 99%