Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?

ABSTRACT Disturbance is fundamental to the state and dynamics of biological communities, and understanding biotic responses to disturbance is critical to effective biodiversity conservation. However, a predictive understanding of how faunal communities respond to habitat disturbance remains elusive....

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Main Authors: Angga Rachmansah, Keith Christian, Brett P. Murphy, Christine Schlesinger, Alan N. Andersen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-03-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70939
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author Angga Rachmansah
Keith Christian
Brett P. Murphy
Christine Schlesinger
Alan N. Andersen
author_facet Angga Rachmansah
Keith Christian
Brett P. Murphy
Christine Schlesinger
Alan N. Andersen
author_sort Angga Rachmansah
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Disturbance is fundamental to the state and dynamics of biological communities, and understanding biotic responses to disturbance is critical to effective biodiversity conservation. However, a predictive understanding of how faunal communities respond to habitat disturbance remains elusive. Recently, a conceptual framework centred on habitat openness was developed for understanding ant responses to disturbance. It proposes that habitat openness is a fundamental driver of variation among ant communities, and that the primary impacts of disturbance are mediated through ant functional responses to changes in openness. Like ants, terrestrial reptiles are ectotherms and are therefore especially sensitive to disturbance‐induced increases in habitat openness because of changes in the thermal environment. Therefore, reptiles might also be expected to conform to a disturbance framework based on habitat openness. Here we assess the extent to which this occurs by combining a quantitative analysis of recent publications with a broader synthesis of the literature. We found strong support for the framework applying to terrestrial reptiles. We suggest that the framework can be strengthened by a mechanistic understanding of functional traits in relation to habitat openness. For ectotherms, ecophysiological traits could be particularly important for responding to disturbance‐mediated changes in microclimate, but habitat openness also influences other important factors such as food availability and predation. Finally, the framework appears to be highly applicable to a wider range of faunal groups beyond ants and reptiles.
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spelling doaj-art-bbfd852287b740518bdbd9fa2b960dd22025-08-20T01:48:42ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-03-01153n/an/a10.1002/ece3.70939Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?Angga Rachmansah0Keith Christian1Brett P. Murphy2Christine Schlesinger3Alan N. Andersen4Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Brinkin Northern Territory AustraliaResearch Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Brinkin Northern Territory AustraliaResearch Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Brinkin Northern Territory AustraliaResearch Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Brinkin Northern Territory AustraliaResearch Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Brinkin Northern Territory AustraliaABSTRACT Disturbance is fundamental to the state and dynamics of biological communities, and understanding biotic responses to disturbance is critical to effective biodiversity conservation. However, a predictive understanding of how faunal communities respond to habitat disturbance remains elusive. Recently, a conceptual framework centred on habitat openness was developed for understanding ant responses to disturbance. It proposes that habitat openness is a fundamental driver of variation among ant communities, and that the primary impacts of disturbance are mediated through ant functional responses to changes in openness. Like ants, terrestrial reptiles are ectotherms and are therefore especially sensitive to disturbance‐induced increases in habitat openness because of changes in the thermal environment. Therefore, reptiles might also be expected to conform to a disturbance framework based on habitat openness. Here we assess the extent to which this occurs by combining a quantitative analysis of recent publications with a broader synthesis of the literature. We found strong support for the framework applying to terrestrial reptiles. We suggest that the framework can be strengthened by a mechanistic understanding of functional traits in relation to habitat openness. For ectotherms, ecophysiological traits could be particularly important for responding to disturbance‐mediated changes in microclimate, but habitat openness also influences other important factors such as food availability and predation. Finally, the framework appears to be highly applicable to a wider range of faunal groups beyond ants and reptiles.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70939disturbanceectothermfunctional compositionhabitat opennessterrestrial reptile
spellingShingle Angga Rachmansah
Keith Christian
Brett P. Murphy
Christine Schlesinger
Alan N. Andersen
Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?
Ecology and Evolution
disturbance
ectotherm
functional composition
habitat openness
terrestrial reptile
title Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?
title_full Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?
title_fullStr Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?
title_full_unstemmed Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?
title_short Faunal Responses to Habitat Disturbance: Do the Principles Explaining Responses of Ant Communities Also Apply to Terrestrial Reptiles?
title_sort faunal responses to habitat disturbance do the principles explaining responses of ant communities also apply to terrestrial reptiles
topic disturbance
ectotherm
functional composition
habitat openness
terrestrial reptile
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70939
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