Restoration and conservation of priority areas of caatinga’s semi-arid forest remnants can support connectivity within an agricultural landscape
Artículo
Open/ Download
Access note
Acceso abierto
Publication date
2021Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Salazar, Andrés A.
Cómo citar
Restoration and conservation of priority areas of caatinga’s semi-arid forest remnants can support connectivity within an agricultural landscape
Author
Abstract
Land-use and land-cover (LULC) changes are major drivers of biodiversity loss in semi-arid
regions, such as the Caatinga biome located in the Northeast of Brazil. We investigated landscape
dynamics and fragmentation in an area of the São Francisco Valley in the Brazilian Caatinga biome
and measured the effect of these dynamics on ecological, functional and structural connectivity over
a 33-year period (1985–2018). We calculated landscape connectivity indices based on graph theory
to quantify the effect of further agricultural expansion on ecological connectivity at the landscape
scale. We used a multicriteria decision analysis that integrates graph-based connectivity indices at
the habitat patch scale, combined with an index of human disturbance to identify patches that, if
conserved and restored, preserve the connectivity of the landscape most effectively. In the period
studied, agriculture increased at a rate of 2104 ha/year, while native Caatinga vegetation decreased
at a rate of 5203 ha/year. Both dense and open Caatinga became more fragmented, with the number
of fragments increasing by 85.2% and 28.6%, respectively, whilst the average fragment size decreased
by 84.8% and 6.1% for dense and open Caatinga, respectively. If agriculture patches were to expand
by a 300 m buffer around each patch, the overall ecological connectivity could be reduced by 6–15%,
depending on the species’ (small- to mid-size terrestrial vertebrates) mobility characteristics for which
the connectivity indices were calculated. We provided explicit spatial connectivity and fragmentation
information for the conservation and restoration of the Caatinga vegetation in the studied area. This
information helps with conservation planning in this rapidly changing ecosystem.
Patrocinador
Nexus project initiative from Newton Fund/BBSRC project BB/R016429/1
ANID project NEXUS FONDEF BB/R0164291
Center of Applied Ecology and Sustainability (CAPES) PIA/BASAL FB0002
Indexation
Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Quote Item
Land 2021, 10, 550.
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: