Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings

Global oil palm expansion has caused substantial ecological damage to tropical biodiversity. We quantified wild mammal richness in large oil palm plantation estates and semi-traditional oil palm smallholdings in Peninsular Malaysia. We sampled 41 plantation estates and 14 smallholdings, and used lin...

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Main Authors: Azhar, B., Lindenmayer, David B., Wood, Jeff, Fischer, Joern, Hussin, Mohamed Zakaria
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2014
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37186/1/Ecological%20impacts%20of%20oil%20palm%20agriculture%20on%20forest%20mammals%20in%20plantation%20estates%20and%20smallholdings.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37186/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.371862016-08-11T03:09:30Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37186/ Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings Azhar, B. Lindenmayer, David B. Wood, Jeff Fischer, Joern Hussin, Mohamed Zakaria Global oil palm expansion has caused substantial ecological damage to tropical biodiversity. We quantified wild mammal richness in large oil palm plantation estates and semi-traditional oil palm smallholdings in Peninsular Malaysia. We sampled 41 plantation estates and 14 smallholdings, and used line-transect surveys coupled with semi-structured interviews to develop a database of the native mammals found in oil palm landscapes. Semi-structured interviews revealed a total of 32 mammal species, including 13 IUCN Red Listed taxa of high conservation value. Our results showed that human activity and the size of patches of remnant rainforest were important factors influencing the richness of mammal species in oil palm landscapes. More carnivorous and herbivorous species were reported in smallholdings than plantation estates, most probably as a response to greater habitat heterogeneity in smallholdings. All species, irrespective of conservation status, were more likely to be recorded in oil palm plantation estates and smallholdings that supported large areas of native forest. Our findings suggest that biodiversity conservation in oil palm landscapes will require a variety of conservation approaches. Minimizing poaching, reducing disturbance from human activity, and protecting existing forest patches appear particularly important. Strategies to promote the persistence of both high and low conservation value species should be adopted as part of a strengthened certification scheme for oil palm production. Springer 2014 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37186/1/Ecological%20impacts%20of%20oil%20palm%20agriculture%20on%20forest%20mammals%20in%20plantation%20estates%20and%20smallholdings.pdf Azhar, B. and Lindenmayer, David B. and Wood, Jeff and Fischer, Joern and Hussin, Mohamed Zakaria (2014) Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings. Biodiversity and Conservation, 23 (5). pp. 1175-1191. ISSN 0960-3115; ESSN: 1572-9710 10.1007/s10531-014-0656-z
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Global oil palm expansion has caused substantial ecological damage to tropical biodiversity. We quantified wild mammal richness in large oil palm plantation estates and semi-traditional oil palm smallholdings in Peninsular Malaysia. We sampled 41 plantation estates and 14 smallholdings, and used line-transect surveys coupled with semi-structured interviews to develop a database of the native mammals found in oil palm landscapes. Semi-structured interviews revealed a total of 32 mammal species, including 13 IUCN Red Listed taxa of high conservation value. Our results showed that human activity and the size of patches of remnant rainforest were important factors influencing the richness of mammal species in oil palm landscapes. More carnivorous and herbivorous species were reported in smallholdings than plantation estates, most probably as a response to greater habitat heterogeneity in smallholdings. All species, irrespective of conservation status, were more likely to be recorded in oil palm plantation estates and smallholdings that supported large areas of native forest. Our findings suggest that biodiversity conservation in oil palm landscapes will require a variety of conservation approaches. Minimizing poaching, reducing disturbance from human activity, and protecting existing forest patches appear particularly important. Strategies to promote the persistence of both high and low conservation value species should be adopted as part of a strengthened certification scheme for oil palm production.
format Article
author Azhar, B.
Lindenmayer, David B.
Wood, Jeff
Fischer, Joern
Hussin, Mohamed Zakaria
spellingShingle Azhar, B.
Lindenmayer, David B.
Wood, Jeff
Fischer, Joern
Hussin, Mohamed Zakaria
Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
author_facet Azhar, B.
Lindenmayer, David B.
Wood, Jeff
Fischer, Joern
Hussin, Mohamed Zakaria
author_sort Azhar, B.
title Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
title_short Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
title_full Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
title_fullStr Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
title_full_unstemmed Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
title_sort ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings
publisher Springer
publishDate 2014
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37186/1/Ecological%20impacts%20of%20oil%20palm%20agriculture%20on%20forest%20mammals%20in%20plantation%20estates%20and%20smallholdings.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37186/
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