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ABSTRACT:

The impacts of logging on the abundance species richness and community composition of butterfly guilds in Borneo

Journal Article

Cleary D; Boyle T; Setyawati T; Menken S

2005

Journal of Applied Entomology

129

52-59

The impact of logging on the relative abundance species richness and community composition of four butterfly guilds (generalists herb specialists liana specialists and tree specialists) was assessed in differentially disturbed logging treatments located within the province of Central Kalimantan Indonesian Borneo. Logging affected the overall butterfly composition by increasing the dominance of liana specialists at the expense of tree specialists and increasing the species richness of herb specialists and to a lesser extent generalists. There was no significant difference however in the species richness of liana specialists or tree specialists across logging treatments. The species composition of all guilds differed significantly among logging treatments with the greatest difference between unlogged forest and road sites with older and recently logged forest intermediate between these extremes. Our results indicate that logging has a disparate effect on abundance and species richness within each butterfly guild. We suggest that shifts in the dominance of butterfly guilds are due to large-scale logging-induced changes in vegetation particularly in relation to liana abundance. The higher butterfly species richness in logged areas on the other hand is probably because of butterfly species associated with open areas entering the logged forest from roads or other large open areas.

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The Liana Ecology Project is supported by Marquette University and funded in part by the National Science Foundation.

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