Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes

There is growing interest in the ecological value of set-aside habitats around rivers in tropical agriculture. These riparian buffers typically comprise forest or other non-production habitat, and are established to maintain water quality and hydrological processes, while also supporting biodiversit...

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Main Authors: Williamson, Joseph, Slade, Eleanor M., Luke, Sarah H., Swinfield, Tom, Chung, Arthur Y. C., Coomes, David A., Heroin, Herry, Jucker, Tommaso, Lewis, Owen T., Vairappan, Charles S., Rossiter, Stephen J., Struebig, Matthew J.
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146543
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1465432023-02-28T16:40:08Z Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes Williamson, Joseph Slade, Eleanor M. Luke, Sarah H. Swinfield, Tom Chung, Arthur Y. C. Coomes, David A. Heroin, Herry Jucker, Tommaso Lewis, Owen T. Vairappan, Charles S. Rossiter, Stephen J. Struebig, Matthew J. Asian School of the Environment Science::Biological sciences::Ecology Tropical Agriculture Dung Beetle There is growing interest in the ecological value of set-aside habitats around rivers in tropical agriculture. These riparian buffers typically comprise forest or other non-production habitat, and are established to maintain water quality and hydrological processes, while also supporting biodiversity, ecosystem function and landscape connectivity. We investigated the capacity for riparian buffers to act as microclimatic refugia by combining field-based measurements of temperature, humidity and dung beetle communities with remotely sensed data from LiDAR across an oil palm dominated landscape in Borneo. Riparian buffers offer a cool and humid habitat relative to surrounding oil palm plantations, with wider buffers characterised by conditions comparable to riparian sites in continuous logged forest. High vegetation quality and topographic sheltering were strongly associated with cooler and more humid microclimates in riparian habitats across the landscape. Variance in beetle diversity was also predicted by both proximity-to-edge and microclimatic conditions within the buffer, suggesting that narrow buffers amplify the negative impacts that high temperatures have on biodiversity. Synthesis and applications. Widely legislated riparian buffer widths of 20–30 m each side of a river may provide drier and less humid microclimatic conditions than continuous forest. Adopting wider buffers and maintaining high vegetation quality will ensure set-asides established for hydrological reasons bring co-benefits for terrestrial biodiversity, both now, and in the face of anthropogenic climate change. Published version This work was funded by the Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC) through the Human Modified Tropical Forests programme (NE/K016261/1; NE/K016377/1), as well as the Newton-Ungku Omar Fund via the British Council and Malaysian Industry Government Group for High Technology (216433953). NERC also funded the PhD studentship for J.W. (NE/L002485/1) and research fellowship of T.J. (NE/S01537X/1). We are grateful to the Sabah Biodiversity Council for permission to conduct the fieldwork (S.H.L.: JKM/MBS.1000-2/2JLD.5(13); J.W.: JKM/MBS. 1000-2/2JLD.7(83); E.M.S.: JKM/MBS.1000-2/2(381)), Jonathan Parrett for help with dung beetle identification, Sui Peng Heon for translating the abstract into Malay, Matilda Brindle for proof-reading the manuscript and the South East Asian Rainforest Research Programme staff, who made this work possible: Unding Jami, Johnny Larenus, Amir, Anis, David, Didy, Dino, Joanni, Kiki, Loly, Mudin, Noy and Zul. 2021-02-25T07:56:12Z 2021-02-25T07:56:12Z 2020 Journal Article Williamson, J., Slade, E. M., Luke, S. H., Swinfield, T., Chung, A. Y. C., Coomes, D. A., ... Struebig, M. J. (2020). Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes. Journal of Applied Ecology, 58(2), 431-442. doi:10.1111/1365-2664.13784 1365-2664 0000-0003-4916-5386 0000-0002-6108-1196 0000-0002-8335-5960 0000-0001-9354-5090 0000-0002-9529-4114 0000-0002-8261-2582 0000-0002-0751-6312 0000-0001-7935-6111 0000-0001-7453-1718 0000-0002-3881-4515 0000-0003-2058-8502 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146543 10.1111/1365-2664.13784 2-s2.0-85097010218 2 58 431 442 en Journal of Applied Ecology © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Applied Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
Tropical Agriculture
Dung Beetle
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
Tropical Agriculture
Dung Beetle
Williamson, Joseph
Slade, Eleanor M.
Luke, Sarah H.
Swinfield, Tom
Chung, Arthur Y. C.
Coomes, David A.
Heroin, Herry
Jucker, Tommaso
Lewis, Owen T.
Vairappan, Charles S.
Rossiter, Stephen J.
Struebig, Matthew J.
Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
description There is growing interest in the ecological value of set-aside habitats around rivers in tropical agriculture. These riparian buffers typically comprise forest or other non-production habitat, and are established to maintain water quality and hydrological processes, while also supporting biodiversity, ecosystem function and landscape connectivity. We investigated the capacity for riparian buffers to act as microclimatic refugia by combining field-based measurements of temperature, humidity and dung beetle communities with remotely sensed data from LiDAR across an oil palm dominated landscape in Borneo. Riparian buffers offer a cool and humid habitat relative to surrounding oil palm plantations, with wider buffers characterised by conditions comparable to riparian sites in continuous logged forest. High vegetation quality and topographic sheltering were strongly associated with cooler and more humid microclimates in riparian habitats across the landscape. Variance in beetle diversity was also predicted by both proximity-to-edge and microclimatic conditions within the buffer, suggesting that narrow buffers amplify the negative impacts that high temperatures have on biodiversity. Synthesis and applications. Widely legislated riparian buffer widths of 20–30 m each side of a river may provide drier and less humid microclimatic conditions than continuous forest. Adopting wider buffers and maintaining high vegetation quality will ensure set-asides established for hydrological reasons bring co-benefits for terrestrial biodiversity, both now, and in the face of anthropogenic climate change.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Williamson, Joseph
Slade, Eleanor M.
Luke, Sarah H.
Swinfield, Tom
Chung, Arthur Y. C.
Coomes, David A.
Heroin, Herry
Jucker, Tommaso
Lewis, Owen T.
Vairappan, Charles S.
Rossiter, Stephen J.
Struebig, Matthew J.
format Article
author Williamson, Joseph
Slade, Eleanor M.
Luke, Sarah H.
Swinfield, Tom
Chung, Arthur Y. C.
Coomes, David A.
Heroin, Herry
Jucker, Tommaso
Lewis, Owen T.
Vairappan, Charles S.
Rossiter, Stephen J.
Struebig, Matthew J.
author_sort Williamson, Joseph
title Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
title_short Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
title_full Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
title_fullStr Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
title_sort riparian buffers act as microclimatic refugia in oil palm landscapes
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146543
_version_ 1759854202051362816