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Richness, Abundance, and Complementarity of Fruit-feeding Butterfly Species in Relict Sacred Forests and Forest Reserves of Ghana
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Richness, Abundance, and Complementarity of Fruit-feeding Butterfly Species in Relict Sacred Forests and Forest Reserves of
Ghana
J. L. Bossart1 , E. Opuni-Frimpong2, 3, S. Kuudaar2 and E. Nkrumah2
| (1) |
Department of Applied Biology & Biomedical Engineering, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Terre Haute, IN 47803, USA |
| (2) |
Forestry Research Institute of Ghana, Kumasi, Ghana |
| (3) |
Present address: School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science, Michigan, Technological University, Houghton, MI 49931, USA |
Received: 23 December 2003 Accepted: 08 February 2005
Abstract Sacred forest groves in Ghana are centuries old protected areas that were once part of continuous forest cover but now mostly
exist as relict forest patches embedded in an agropastoral landscape. We conducted a year-long survey of the fruit-feeding
butterfly fauna of four sacred groves and two forest reserves in the moist semi-deciduous forest zone of Ghana to characterize
resident species diversity and complementarity among communities. Joint analysis of frugivorous butterfly diversity at these
six forest fragments, which ranged in size from 6 to 5000 ha, was used to evaluate the conservation potential of these ancient
indigenous reserves. A total of 6836 individuals were trapped across all sites, representing 79 species and five subfamilies.
Community diversity was characterized in terms of, (a) number of species accumulated versus sampling effort, (b) rarefied
species richness, (c) nonparametric richness estimates, (d) species evenness, (e) Simpson’s Index of Diversity, and (f) complementarity
of communities. Diversity of the fruit-feeding butterfly communities, quantified in terms of both species evenness and rarefied
species richness, was higher at the larger forest reserves than at the small sacred forest groves. Additionally, although
all sites had species trapped only at that site, the 5000-ha forest reserve harbored a resident community that was clearly
distinctive from and more diverse than the other communities including the other forest reserve. Hence, our findings add to
the burgeoning body of data that indicates large reserves are the foundation of successful conservation programs. Nonetheless,
we found these small forest patches contribute to biodiversity conservation in at least three ways and these are identified
and discussed. We also identify a number of species that appear more or less vulnerable to dynamics of forest fragmentation
based on changes in their relative abundance across sites and we interpret these data in the context of potential indicator
species and theoretical predictions of at-risk species.
Keywords Afrotropics - Biodiversity hotspot - Community composition - Dominance–diversity curves - Evenness - Fragmentation - Richness estimators
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