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Effects of Selective Logging on the Butterflies of a Bornean Rainforest
Authors:S. J. Willott§  ,D. C. Lim&dagger  ,S. G. Compton&dagger   and,S. L. Sutton&Dagger  
Affiliation:School of Geography , University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, United Kingdom;Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation , School of Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom;"Heigh Head ," Mewith, Bentham, Lancaster LA2 7AU, United Kingdom
Abstract:Abstract: Selective logging has been the main cause of disturbance to tropical forests in Southeast Asia, so the extent to which biodiversity is maintained in selectively logged forest is of prime conservation importance. We compared the butterfly assemblages of Bornean primary rainforest to those of rainforest selectively logged 6 years previously. We sampled by means of replicated transects stratified into riverine and ridge forests and we included roads in the logged forest. There was a three-fold variation in species richness and abundance over the 8-month sampling period. More species and individuals were observed in the logged forest, although between-replicate variability was high. Rarefied species richness was positively correlated with canopy openness within the range of disturbance levels encountered at our forest sites. Within families, there was no significant difference in the number of species between primary and logged forest. There was a significant difference in the relative abundance of species, but this was due largely to the abundance of one or two species. Community ordination separated the sites along a gradient of disturbance and revealed strong differences between riverine and ridge-forest butterfly assemblages in primary forest that were obscured in logged forest. There was no evidence that logging has resulted in a change in the composition of the butterfly assemblages from species with a local distribution to more widespread species. We conclude that at a logged forest site in close proximity to primary forest, low intensities of logging do not necessarily reduce the species richness or abundance of butterflies, although assemblage composition is changed.
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