2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2017.02.031
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Testing the habitat amount hypothesis for South American small mammals

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Cited by 94 publications
(95 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…A study on woodland small mammals in the Brazilian cerrado (i.e. savanna) showed that habitat amount is the most important single predictor of species richness, while patch size and isolation generally had no effect on species richness after controlling for the effect of habitat amount (Melo, Sponchiado, Cáceres, & Fahrig, ). Predictions of the habitat amount hypothesis were upheld for rare reptiles and one frog species in an agricultural landscape in New South Wales, Australia (Pulsford, Lindenmayer, & Driscoll, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study on woodland small mammals in the Brazilian cerrado (i.e. savanna) showed that habitat amount is the most important single predictor of species richness, while patch size and isolation generally had no effect on species richness after controlling for the effect of habitat amount (Melo, Sponchiado, Cáceres, & Fahrig, ). Predictions of the habitat amount hypothesis were upheld for rare reptiles and one frog species in an agricultural landscape in New South Wales, Australia (Pulsford, Lindenmayer, & Driscoll, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As stated by Fahrig (2013), the correct definition of habitat for the species group under evaluation is an essential step to understand how the reduction in the amount of habitat affects the number of species in local landscapes. This approach has been used in other studies, considering only a subgroup of species to conduct analyses for communities (Melo et al, 2017;Pardini et al, 2010;Vieira et al, 2018). (De Coster et al, 2015), and the replacement of large-fruited trees by early-successional, small-seeded species at fragment edges (Magnago et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Vieira, Almeida‐Gomes, Delciellos, Cerqueira and Crouzeilles () used forest cover as a proxy of habitat amount and then selected only forest species of non‐volant small mammals to test the habitat amount hypothesis. Indeed, there is evidence of a positive relationship between species diversity and total amount of habitat in fragmented landscapes (Andrén, ; Melo, Sponchiado, Cáceres & Fahrig, ; Pardini, Bueno, Gardner, Prado & Metzger, ; Püttker, Bueno, Barros, Sommer & Pardini, ; Smith, Fahrig & Francis, ), but also of the existence of fragmentation thresholds or regime shifts in the relationship between the amount of habitat and the number and composition of species (Andrén, ; Banks‐Leite et al., ; Pardini et al., ). However, comparatively, fewer studies have aimed to test how the reduction in amount of habitat in fragmented landscapes affects functional diversity and, most importantly, whether the relationship is linear or includes thresholds of habitat loss where function diversity reduces more sharply.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Melo et al . () found that the habitat amount hypothesis holds for South American small mammals, Haddad et al . () found that the hypothesis does not hold for plant and micro‐arthropod communities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%