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Journal ArticleDOI

Basin‐Wide Effects of Game Harvest on Vertebrate Population Densities in Amazonian Forests: Implications for Animal‐Mediated Seed Dispersal

TLDR
A comprehensive meta-analysis of changes in population density or other abundance estimates for 30 mid-sized to large mammal, bird and reptile species in 101 hunted and nonhunted, but otherwise undisturbed, Neotropical forest sites finds frugivorous species showed more marked declines in abundance in heavily hunted sites than seed predators and browsers, regardless of the effects of body size.
Abstract
Vertebrate responses to hunting are widely variable for target and nontarget species depending on the history of hunting and productivity of any given site and the life history traits of game species. We provide a comprehensive meta-analysis of changes in population density or other abundance estimates for 30 mid-sized to large mammal, bird and reptile species in 101 hunted and nonhunted, but otherwise undisturbed, Neotropical forest sites. The data set was analyzed using both an unnested approach, based on population density estimates, and a nested approach in which pairwise comparisons of abundance metrics were restricted to geographic groups of sites sharing similar habitat and soil conditions. This resulted in 25 geographic clusters of sites within which 1811 population abundance estimates were compared across different levels of hunting pressure. Average nested changes in abundance across increasingly greater levels of hunting pressure ranged from moderately positive to highly negative. Populations of all species combined declined across greater differences in hunting pressure by up to 74.8 percent from their numeric abundance in less intensively hunted sites, but harvest-sensitive species faired far worse. Of the 30 species examined, 22 declined significantly at high levels of hunting. Body size significantly affected the direction and magnitude of abundance changes, with large-bodied species declining faster in overhunted sites. Frugivorous species showed more marked declines in abundance in heavily hunted sites than seed predators and browsers, regardless of the effects of body size. The implications of hunting for seed dispersal are discussed in terms of community dynamics in semi-defaunated tropical forests.

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Citations
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Defaunation in the Anthropocene

TL;DR: Defaunation is both a pervasive component of the planet’s sixth mass extinction and also a major driver of global ecological change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synergies among extinction drivers under global change.

TL;DR: Estimates of extinction risk for most species are more severe than previously recognised and conservation actions which only target single-threat drivers risk being inadequate because of the cascading effects caused by unmanaged synergies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecosystem Services Provided by Birds

TL;DR: The goals for this review are to lay the groundwork on supporting services to facilitate future efforts to estimate their economic value, to highlight gaps in knowledge, and to point to future directions for additional research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prospects for tropical forest biodiversity in a human-modified world.

TL;DR: A critical synthesis of the scientific insights that guide the understanding of patterns and processes underpinning forest biodiversity in the human-modified tropics are provided, and a conceptual framework that integrates a broad range of social and ecological factors that define and contextualize the possible future of tropical forest species is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Big city life: carnivores in urban environments

TL;DR: In a time of massive environmental change across the globe, the continuing encroachment of urbanization upon wilderness areas is substantially reducing the availability of natural habitats for many species; therefore, understanding the biology of any taxon that is able to adapt to and exploit anthropogenically disturbed systems must aid us in both controlling and developing suitable conservation measures for the future of such species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distance Sampling: Estimating Abundance of Biological Populations

TL;DR: This book presents a meta-modelling framework for estimating the probability of detection on the line or point in the context of tuna vessel observer data to assess trends in abundance of dolphins in the North Atlantic.
Book

Distance Sampling: Estimating abundance of biological populations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a key function formulation for distance data to estimate the probability of detection on the line or point of interest (line transects) and the variance in sample size.
Book

Seed Dispersal and Frugivory : Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation

TL;DR: Historical and theoretical aspects of frugivory and seed dispersal plant strategies animal strategies conseqences of seed disperseal conservation perspectives are studied.
Book

Hunting for Sustainability in Tropical Forests

TL;DR: Bennett et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the impact and sustainability of sustainable hunting at multiple Amazonian forest sites and concluded that the current hunting practices by the Huaorani are not sustainable.
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