D. Vallan, Influence of forest fragmentation on amphibian diversity in the nature reserve of Ambohitantely, highland Madagascar, BIOL CONSER, 96(1), 2000, pp. 31-43
In Ambohitantely the rainforest is divided distinctly by pseudosteppe into
more than 500 fragments. The amphibian faunas of seven such fragments varyi
ng ill size from 0.16 to 1250 ha were examined. Twenty-eight. amphibian spe
cies of two families (Ranidae and Microhylidae) were recorded in the rainfo
rest fragments. The species numbers in the fragments were positively correl
ated with fragment area and form nested subsets. Composition and individual
frequency in small fragments differed from that of the control site (1250
ha). The relative individual density (individuals found each searching hour
) was negatively correlated with the fragment size. This is probably due to
the fact that the density of streams and brooks was higher in small fragme
nts, which also explains why smaller fragments contained a larger proportio
n of brook-dwelling amphibian species than larger fragments. Species that l
ive Far from water and show a reproduction strategy independent of running
waters or ponds, such as certain microhylids, were only present in fragment
s of 30 ha or more. The more common species in the control site were also f
ound in the majority of fragments. A rainforest remnant of 1250 ha seems to
be large enough to contain a large part of the original amphibian fauna, p
rovided that there are suitable microhabitats. Compared to other taxa, amph
ibians generally seem to react less sensitively to fragmentation. Due to th
e sensitivity to microclimate changes microhylids and certain species of th
e subfamily of Mantellinae represent good bioindicators. (C) 2000 Elsevier
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