Epiphytic orchid diversity found on trees and shrubs in coffee cultivated Afromontane rainforest, SW Ethiopia


Autoria(s): De Beenhouwer, Matthias; Aerts, Raf; Hundera, Kitessa; van Overtveld, Koen; Honnay, Olivier
Cobertura

LATITUDE: 7.700000 * LONGITUDE: 36.700000

Data(s)

30/07/2015

Resumo

The moist evergreen Afromontane forest of SW Ethiopia has become extremely fragmented and most remnants are intensively managed for cultivation of coffee (Coffea arabica). We investigated the distributions of epiphytic orchids in shade trees and their understory in forests with contrasting management intensity to determine biodiversity losses associated with coffee cultivation and to determine the capacity of coffee shrubs to act as refugia for orchid species. We studied epiphytic orchids in managed forests and natural forests and recorded orchid diversity and abundance in different tree zones of 339 trees and in the understory. Coffee management was associated with a downward shift of orchid species as orchid species were occurring in significantly lower tree zones in managed forest. The number of shrubs in the understory of managed forest was not higher than in natural forests, yet orchid abundance was higher in the understory of managed forests. Local extinctions of epiphytic orchids and species losses in the outer tree zones (a contraction of habitat) in managed forests are most likely driven by losses of large, complex-structured climax trees, and changes in microclimate, respectively. Coffee shrubs and their shade trees in managed forests are shown here to be a suitable habitat for only a limited set of orchid species. As farmers continue to convert natural forest into managed forest for coffee cultivation, further losses of habitat quality and collateral declines in regional epiphytic orchid diversity can be expected. Therefore, the conservation of epiphytic orchid diversity, as well as other components of diversity of the coffee forests, must primarily rely on avoiding coffee management intensification in the remaining natural forest. Convincing farmers to keep forest-climax trees in their coffee forest and to tolerate orchids on their coffee shrubs may also contribute to a more favorable conservation status of orchids in Ethiopian coffee agroecosystems.

Formato

application/zip, 4 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.834569

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.834569

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: De Beenhouwer, Matthias; Aerts, Raf; Hundera, Kitessa; van Overtveld, Koen; Honnay, Olivier (2015): Management intensification in Ethiopian coffee forests is associated with crown habitat contraction and loss of specialized epiphytic orchid species. Basic and Applied Ecology, 16(7), 592-600, doi:10.1016/j.baae.2015.06.006

Palavras-Chave #1 = SFC = Semi-forest coffee; 2 = FC = Forest Coffee; A. brachycarpa; A. humile; A. luteo-alba; A. thomsonii; Aerangis brachycarpa; Aerangis luteo-alba; Aerangis thomsonii; Angraecum humile; B. intertextum; B. josephi; Bulbophyllum intertextum; Bulbophyllum josephi; Bulbophyllum sp.; Circumference; D. candida; D. fragrantissima; D. rohrii; D. tenuicalcar; Diaphananthe candida; Diaphananthe fragrantissima; Diaphananthe rohrii; Diaphananthe tenuicalcar; Ethiopia; HAND; ID; Identification; including P. rivae; Land use; M. globulosa; Microcoelia globulosa; of tree (Z2-Z5); of tree at breast height; P. bennettiana; P. caduca; P. cultriformis; P. eurychila; P. steudneri; P. tessellata; Polystachya bennettiana; Polystachya caduca; Polystachya cultriformis; Polystachya eurychila; Polystachya sp.; Polystachya steudneri; Polystachya tessellata; R. adoxum; Rhipidoglossum adoxum; S. grandiflora; S. repens; Sampling by hand; Shrubs; Stolzia grandiflora; Stolzia repens; SW_Ethiopia; Tree height; tree number; within one plot; Zone
Tipo

Dataset