Plants faring worse than monkeys in increasingly patchy forests of Costa Rica

Plants faring worse than monkeys in increasingly patchy forests of Costa Rica
Central American spider monkey in Costa Rica. Credit: Laura Bolt

Cattle ranching, agriculture and other human activities are breaking up Costa Rican forests into isolated patchy fragments, but causing more problems for native plant populations than for monkey species sharing the same habitat.

A study published in the journal Primates shows that while plants growing near the edges of cleared regions are negatively impacted by human activity, sharing the same habitat do not fare as poorly.

"These results suggest that the monkey species studied are resilient enough to withstand some fragmentation of their habitat," said Laura Bolt, a lecturer in the Department of Anthropology in the Faculty of Arts & Science at the University of Toronto, and lead author of the study.

Bolt and her colleagues conducted vegetation and monkey population surveys at the La Suerte Biological Research Station site in northeastern Costa Rica, a patch of tropical rainforest in a largely deforested .

The researchers measured the presence of vegetation and three different monkey species: mantled howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata); white-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus); and Central American spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi). They compared the density of each species in and interior regions. Forest edge regions were within 100 metres of barbed wire fences marking the edge of the forest and the start of coconut plantations or cattle pasture, while forest interior regions were more than 100 metres from the edge of the forest.

Plants faring worse than monkeys in increasingly patchy forests of Costa Rica
Mantled howler monkeys in Costa Rica. Credit: Maderas Rainforest Conservancy

The researchers found less diversity of tree species at the forest edge compared to the interior, and noted that these trees were smaller. In contrast, the monkeys did not show any preferences for forest edge or interior.

The results provide hope that primates and other wildlife are able to withstand severe habitat fragmentation.

"The rainforest fragment we studied was 3 square kilometres and was large enough that the monkey species did not demonstrate significant adverse effects," said Bolt. "But these monkey species may not be able to live in forest fragments that are smaller without negative effects."

Bolt says the study informs conservation efforts for these monkey species and for the Costa Rican rainforest.

"People tend to think of Costa Rica as a very green country with large patches of continuous rainforest," said Bolt. "While this represents effective marketing to tourists, the reality is that Costa Rica is deforested in many regions."

She notes that, "as more and more forests are destroyed in Costa Rica and throughout Central and South America because of cattle ranching and large-scale banana and pineapple production, it becomes increasingly important to understand the effects of forest fragmentation on the primate that live there."

More information: Laura M. Bolt et al, The influence of anthropogenic edge effects on primate populations and their habitat in a fragmented rainforest in Costa Rica, Primates (2018). DOI: 10.1007/s10329-018-0652-0

Journal information: Primates

Citation: Plants faring worse than monkeys in increasingly patchy forests of Costa Rica (2018, March 12) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2018-03-faring-worse-monkeys-increasingly-patchy.html
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