Riparian buffers can help mitigate biodiversity declines in oil palm agriculture
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Authors
Deere, Nicolas J
Bicknell, Jake E
Mitchell, Simon L
Afendy, Aqilah
Baking, Esther L
Bernard, Henry
Chung, Arthur YC
Ewers, Robert M
Heroin, Herry
Joseph, Nellcy
Lewis, Owen T
Milne, Sol
Fikri, Arman Hadi
Parrett, Jonathan M
Payne, Melissa
Rossiter, Stephen J
Vairappan, Charles S
Vi Vian, Chaw
Wilkinson, Clare L
Williamson, Joseph
Wong, Andrew BH
Slade, Eleanor M
Davies, Zoe G
Struebig, Matthew J
Publication Date
2022-05-31Journal Title
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
ISSN
1540-9295
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Deere, N. J., Bicknell, J. E., Mitchell, S. L., Afendy, A., Baking, E. L., Bernard, H., Chung, A. Y., et al. (2022). Riparian buffers can help mitigate biodiversity declines in oil palm agriculture. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2473
Abstract
Agricultural expansion drives biodiversity decline in forested tropical regions. Consequently, it is important to understand the conservation value of remnant forest in production landscapes. In a tropical landscape dominated by oil palm we characterized faunal communities across eight taxa occurring within riparian forest buffers, which are legally protected alongside rivers, and compared them to nearby recovering logged forest. Buffer width was the main predictor of species richness and abundance, with widths of 40-100 m on each side of the river supporting broadly equivalent levels of biodiversity to logged forest. However, width responses varied markedly among taxa, and buffers often lacked forest-dependent species. Much wider buffers than are currently mandated are needed to safeguard most species. The largest biodiversity gains are achieved by increasing relatively narrow buffers. To provide optimal conservation outcomes in tropical production landscapes we encourage policymakers to prescribe width requirements for key taxa and different landscape contexts.
Sponsorship
Newton-Ungku Omar Fund (grants 216433953, 537134717) – delivered by the British Council and funded by the UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and the Malaysian Industry-Government Group for High Technology – as well as the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NE/K016407/1, NE/K016261/1; https://lombok.nerc-hmtf.info/). MJS was supported by a Research Leadership Award from the Leverhulme Trust.
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2473
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337697
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