Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics

Large-scale deforestation in the tropics, triggered by logging and subsequent agricultural monoculture has a significant adverse impact on biodiversity due to habitat degradation. Here, we measured the diversity of butterfly species in three agricultural landscapes, agroforestry orchards, oil palm,...

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Main Authors: Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat, Yahya, Muhammad Syafiq, Norhisham, Ahmad R., Sanusi, Ruzana, van der Meer, Peter J., Azhar, Badrul
Format: Article
Published: Springer 2023
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/106466/
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00442-023-05348-3?error=cookies_not_supported&code=141098fe-1bf5-4f6f-81bd-57e9bb4a6322
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
id my.upm.eprints.106466
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spelling my.upm.eprints.1064662024-10-11T08:36:26Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/106466/ Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat Yahya, Muhammad Syafiq Norhisham, Ahmad R. Sanusi, Ruzana van der Meer, Peter J. Azhar, Badrul Large-scale deforestation in the tropics, triggered by logging and subsequent agricultural monoculture has a significant adverse impact on biodiversity due to habitat degradation. Here, we measured the diversity of butterfly species in three agricultural landscapes, agroforestry orchards, oil palm, and rubber tree plantations. Butterfly species were counted at 127 sampling points over the course of a year using the point count method. We found that agroforestry orchards supported a greater number of butterfly species (74 species) compared to rubber tree (61 species) and oil palm plantations (54 species) which were dominated by generalist (73%) followed by forest specialists (27%). We found no significant difference of butterfly species composition between agroforestry orchards and rubber tree plantation, with both habitats associated with more butterfly species compared to oil palm plantations. This indicates butterflies were able to persist better in certain agricultural landscapes. GLMMs suggested that tree height, undergrowth coverage and height, and elevation determined butterfly diversity. Butterfly species richness was also influenced by season and landscape-level variables such as proximity to forest, mean NDVI, and habitat. Understanding the factors that contributed to butterfly species richness in an agroecosystem, stakeholders should consider management practices to improve biodiversity conservation such as ground vegetation management and retaining adjacent forest areas to enhance butterfly species richness. Furthermore, our findings suggest that agroforestry system should be considered to enhance biodiversity in agricultural landscapes. Springer 2023-03-13 Article PeerReviewed Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat and Yahya, Muhammad Syafiq and Norhisham, Ahmad R. and Sanusi, Ruzana and van der Meer, Peter J. and Azhar, Badrul (2023) Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics. Oecologia, 201 (3). 863- 875. ISSN 0029-8549; ESSN: 1432-1939 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00442-023-05348-3?error=cookies_not_supported&code=141098fe-1bf5-4f6f-81bd-57e9bb4a6322 10.1007/s00442-023-05348-3
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Large-scale deforestation in the tropics, triggered by logging and subsequent agricultural monoculture has a significant adverse impact on biodiversity due to habitat degradation. Here, we measured the diversity of butterfly species in three agricultural landscapes, agroforestry orchards, oil palm, and rubber tree plantations. Butterfly species were counted at 127 sampling points over the course of a year using the point count method. We found that agroforestry orchards supported a greater number of butterfly species (74 species) compared to rubber tree (61 species) and oil palm plantations (54 species) which were dominated by generalist (73%) followed by forest specialists (27%). We found no significant difference of butterfly species composition between agroforestry orchards and rubber tree plantation, with both habitats associated with more butterfly species compared to oil palm plantations. This indicates butterflies were able to persist better in certain agricultural landscapes. GLMMs suggested that tree height, undergrowth coverage and height, and elevation determined butterfly diversity. Butterfly species richness was also influenced by season and landscape-level variables such as proximity to forest, mean NDVI, and habitat. Understanding the factors that contributed to butterfly species richness in an agroecosystem, stakeholders should consider management practices to improve biodiversity conservation such as ground vegetation management and retaining adjacent forest areas to enhance butterfly species richness. Furthermore, our findings suggest that agroforestry system should be considered to enhance biodiversity in agricultural landscapes.
format Article
author Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat
Yahya, Muhammad Syafiq
Norhisham, Ahmad R.
Sanusi, Ruzana
van der Meer, Peter J.
Azhar, Badrul
spellingShingle Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat
Yahya, Muhammad Syafiq
Norhisham, Ahmad R.
Sanusi, Ruzana
van der Meer, Peter J.
Azhar, Badrul
Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
author_facet Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat
Yahya, Muhammad Syafiq
Norhisham, Ahmad R.
Sanusi, Ruzana
van der Meer, Peter J.
Azhar, Badrul
author_sort Wan Zaki, Wan Mamat
title Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
title_short Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
title_full Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
title_fullStr Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
title_full_unstemmed Agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
title_sort agroforestry orchards support greater butterfly diversity than monoculture plantations in the tropics
publisher Springer
publishDate 2023
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/106466/
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00442-023-05348-3?error=cookies_not_supported&code=141098fe-1bf5-4f6f-81bd-57e9bb4a6322
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