Diversity and composition of tropical butterflies along an Afromontane agricultural gradient in the Jimma Highlands, Ethiopia

Norfolk, Olivia, Asale, Abebe, Temesgen, Tsegab, Denu, Dereje, Platts, Philip J., Marchant, Rob and Yewhalaw, Delenasaw (2017) Diversity and composition of tropical butterflies along an Afromontane agricultural gradient in the Jimma Highlands, Ethiopia. Biotropica, 49 (3). pp. 346-354. ISSN 1744-7429

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/btp.12421

Abstract

Afromontane landscapes are typically characterised by a mosaic of smallholder farms and the biodiversity impacts of these practices will vary in accordance to local management and landscape context. Here we assess how tropical butterfly diversity is maintained across an agricultural landscape in the Jimma Highlands of Ethiopia. We used transect surveys to sample understory butterfly communities within degraded natural forest, semi-managed coffee forest (SMCF), exotic timber plantations, open woodland, croplands and pasture. Surveys were conducted in 29 one-hectare plots and repeated five times between January and June 2013. We found that natural forest supports higher butterfly diversity than all agricultural plots (measured with Hill’s numbers). SMCF and timber plantations retain relatively high abundance and diversity, but these metrics drop off sharply in open woodland, cropland and pasture. SMCF and timber plantations share the majority of their species with natural forest and support an equivalent abundance of forest-dependent species, with no increase in widespread species. There was some incongruence in the responses of families and sub-families, notably that Lycaenidae are strongly associated with open woodland and pasture. Adult butterflies clearly utilise forested agricultural practices such as SMCF and timber plantations, but species diversity declines steeply with distance from natural forest suggesting that earlier life-stages may depend on host plants and/or microclimatic conditions that are lost under agricultural management. From a management perspective, the protection of natural forest remains a priority for tropical butterfly conservation, but understanding functioning of the wider landscape mosaic is important as SMCF and timber plantations may act as habitat corridors that facilitate movement between forest fragments.

Item Type: Journal Article
Keywords: Africa, agroforestry, cropland, coffee, Ethiopia, farming, tropical forest
Faculty: ARCHIVED Faculty of Science & Technology (until September 2018)
Depositing User: Dr Olivia Norfolk
Date Deposited: 09 Nov 2016 09:35
Last Modified: 03 Feb 2022 10:02
URI: https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/701080

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