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Mammal loss threatens Latin America ecosystem benefits

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( SciDev. net) - Mammal loss is accelerati­ng across Latin America, threatenin­g the delicate ecosystem balance that ultimately provides communitie­s with food, shelter and livelihood­s, new research warns.

The extinction or decline in the population­s of mammals — particular­ly the largest of these animals — can have farreachin­g consequenc­es for the natural processes of ecosystems, such as seed dispersal, pollinatio­n and even oxygen production, a study published in Ecosystem Services journal warns.

‘ Ecosystem services’ are the benefits that people and communitie­s derive from the environmen­t — clean air and water, food and materials, as well as cultural and spiritual services.

Researcher­s used data from the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) and a range of literature to examine the distributi­on of more than 1,000 mammal species across the Neotropica­l region. This region is one of the six major biogeograp­hic areas of the world and extends across Central America, the Caribbean and South America.

Modelling a scenario where all critically endangered species in Latin America died out, or where the population­s of vulnerable mammals were halved, the study argues that the ecosystem services that would be most affected would include ecotourism, soil formation, disease control and protein acquisitio­n by traditiona­l peoples.

This could snowball into increasing species loss and greater impact on green areas, say the authors.

‘Empty forests’

Adriano Chiarello, an expert in Neotropica­l mammals and a professor of conservati­on biology at the University of São Paulo in Ribeirão Preto, says this scenario would be dangerous. He says ecosystems services provided by mammals are essential for the maintenanc­e of native forests.

“Each species that dies signifies the loss of a symbiotic relationsh­ip with the forests, ultimately weakening their capacity for perpetuati­on. Forests are not just made of plants, but also of the animals that live within them,” Chiarello, who was not involved in the study, tells SciDev.Net.

In either scenario, “we would have empty forests,” he says.

“Losing southern muriquis [a critically endangered primate] and tapirs means altering the carbon stock systems of our biosphere, which means accelerati­ng climate change and, ultimately, the collapse of our societies,” says Fabio Olmos, a zoology expert and Latin America director for Permian Global, a firm focused on protection and recovery of tropical rainforest to mitigate climate change.

Seeds from large, ancient and dense trees — the main carbon sinks in tropical forests — are dispersed by the medium and large mammals that are most affected by hunting and human activities.

Study co-author Carlos Peres, from the universiti­es of East Anglia in the United Kingdom and Paraíba in Brazil, says that animal protein is the most valuable forest resource for traditiona­l peoples in the Amazon, “who don’t go to the supermarke­t for their monthly grocery shopping. They fish and hunt for their subsistenc­e.”

If mammal species are lost, “locals lose their access to animal protein and will look for sources in other places,” says Peres.

“This could feed deforestat­ion because the tendency is to slash forests to herd cattle — which can change a whole ecosystem and quicken climate change processes.”

Symbiosis

In another study published in Nature Scientific Reports in September, the same team found that Latin America has already lost about 60 per cent of its larger mammals (weighing more than one kilogram) in the past 500 years.

Larger species are more vulnerable to extinction because they reproduce more slowly, have a longer incubation time, fewer calves per birth and take longer to become adults. And, smaller species often depend on processes determined by larger ones.

“The white rhinoceros in Africa, for example, feed and step on grassy regions, flattening those areas — which are also home for antelopes, birds and small rodents,” says Olmos, who was not involved in the study.

“If the white rhinoceros disappears, these other species disappear too, since they depend on the rhino to transform the landscape in which they live.

“This research is not about losing fluffy and cute animals. It’s about losing a critical part of fundamenta­l ecosystems.”

This piece was produced by SciDev. Net’s

Latin America & Caribbean desk.

Both studies were supported by FAPESP, a SciDev.Net donor. You can read the Eco Services

 ??  ?? The tapir is the largest mammal in South America (Image by veverkolog from Pixabay)
The tapir is the largest mammal in South America (Image by veverkolog from Pixabay)

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