Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

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Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers. / Rojas‐Castillo, Oscar Alberto; Kepfer Rojas, Sebastian; Juen, Leandro; Fogaça De Assis Montag, Luciano; Carvalho, Fernando Geraldo; Mendes, Thiago Pereira; Chua, Kenny Wei Jie ; Wilkinson, Clare L; Amal, Mohammad Noor Azmai; Fahmi‐Ahmad, Muhammad; Jacobsen, Dean.

In: Conservation Biology, Vol. 38, No. 1, e14172, 2024, p. 1-14.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rojas‐Castillo, OA, Kepfer Rojas, S, Juen, L, Fogaça De Assis Montag, L, Carvalho, FG, Mendes, TP, Chua, KWJ, Wilkinson, CL, Amal, MNA, Fahmi‐Ahmad, M & Jacobsen, D 2024, 'Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers', Conservation Biology, vol. 38, no. 1, e14172, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14172

APA

Rojas‐Castillo, O. A., Kepfer Rojas, S., Juen, L., Fogaça De Assis Montag, L., Carvalho, F. G., Mendes, T. P., Chua, K. W. J., Wilkinson, C. L., Amal, M. N. A., Fahmi‐Ahmad, M., & Jacobsen, D. (2024). Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers. Conservation Biology, 38(1), 1-14. [e14172]. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14172

Vancouver

Rojas‐Castillo OA, Kepfer Rojas S, Juen L, Fogaça De Assis Montag L, Carvalho FG, Mendes TP et al. Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers. Conservation Biology. 2024;38(1):1-14. e14172. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14172

Author

Rojas‐Castillo, Oscar Alberto ; Kepfer Rojas, Sebastian ; Juen, Leandro ; Fogaça De Assis Montag, Luciano ; Carvalho, Fernando Geraldo ; Mendes, Thiago Pereira ; Chua, Kenny Wei Jie ; Wilkinson, Clare L ; Amal, Mohammad Noor Azmai ; Fahmi‐Ahmad, Muhammad ; Jacobsen, Dean. / Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers. In: Conservation Biology. 2024 ; Vol. 38, No. 1. pp. 1-14.

Bibtex

@article{ebb09d41931d468e96fed76db9041c9c,
title = "Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers",
abstract = "The expansion of oil palm plantations has led to land-use change and deforestation in the tropics, which has affected biodiversity. Although the impacts of the crop on terrestrial biodiversity have been extensively reviewed, its effects on freshwater biodiversity remain relatively unexplored. We reviewed the research assessing the impacts of forest-to-oil palm conversion on freshwater biota and the mitigating effect of riparian buffers on these impacts. We searched for studies comparing taxa richness, species abundance, and community composition of macroinvertebrates, amphibians, and fish in streams in forests (primary and disturbed) and oil palm plantations with and without riparian buffers. Then, we conducted a meta-analysis to quantify the overall effect of the land-use change on the 3 taxonomic groups. Twenty-nine studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. On average, plantations lacking buffers hosted 44% and 19% fewer stream taxa than primary and disturbed forests, respectively. Stream taxa on plantations with buffers were 24% lower than in primary forest and did not differ significantly from disturbed forest. In contrast, stream community composition differed between forests and plantations regardless of the presence of riparian buffers. These differences were attributed to agrochemical use and altered environmental conditions in the plantations, including temperature changes, worsened water conditions, microhabitat loss, and food and shelter depletion. On aggregate, abundance did not differ significantly among land uses because increases in generalist species offset the population decline of vulnerable forest specialists in the plantation. Our results reveal significant impacts of forest-to-oil palm conversion on freshwater biota, particularly taxa richness and composition (but not aggregate abundance). Although preserving riparian buffers in the plantations can mitigate the loss of various aquatic species, it cannot conserve primary forest communities. Therefore, safeguarding primary forests from the oil palm expansion is crucial, and further research is needed to address riparian buffers as a promising mitigation strategy in agricultural areas.",
author = "Rojas‐Castillo, {Oscar Alberto} and {Kepfer Rojas}, Sebastian and Leandro Juen and {Foga{\c c}a De Assis Montag}, Luciano and Carvalho, {Fernando Geraldo} and Mendes, {Thiago Pereira} and Chua, {Kenny Wei Jie} and Wilkinson, {Clare L} and Amal, {Mohammad Noor Azmai} and Muhammad Fahmi‐Ahmad and Dean Jacobsen",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1111/cobi.14172",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "1--14",
journal = "Conservation Biology",
issn = "0888-8892",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Meta‐analysis Contrasting Freshwater Biodiversity in Forests and Oil Palm Plantations with and without Riparian Buffers

AU - Rojas‐Castillo, Oscar Alberto

AU - Kepfer Rojas, Sebastian

AU - Juen, Leandro

AU - Fogaça De Assis Montag, Luciano

AU - Carvalho, Fernando Geraldo

AU - Mendes, Thiago Pereira

AU - Chua, Kenny Wei Jie

AU - Wilkinson, Clare L

AU - Amal, Mohammad Noor Azmai

AU - Fahmi‐Ahmad, Muhammad

AU - Jacobsen, Dean

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - The expansion of oil palm plantations has led to land-use change and deforestation in the tropics, which has affected biodiversity. Although the impacts of the crop on terrestrial biodiversity have been extensively reviewed, its effects on freshwater biodiversity remain relatively unexplored. We reviewed the research assessing the impacts of forest-to-oil palm conversion on freshwater biota and the mitigating effect of riparian buffers on these impacts. We searched for studies comparing taxa richness, species abundance, and community composition of macroinvertebrates, amphibians, and fish in streams in forests (primary and disturbed) and oil palm plantations with and without riparian buffers. Then, we conducted a meta-analysis to quantify the overall effect of the land-use change on the 3 taxonomic groups. Twenty-nine studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. On average, plantations lacking buffers hosted 44% and 19% fewer stream taxa than primary and disturbed forests, respectively. Stream taxa on plantations with buffers were 24% lower than in primary forest and did not differ significantly from disturbed forest. In contrast, stream community composition differed between forests and plantations regardless of the presence of riparian buffers. These differences were attributed to agrochemical use and altered environmental conditions in the plantations, including temperature changes, worsened water conditions, microhabitat loss, and food and shelter depletion. On aggregate, abundance did not differ significantly among land uses because increases in generalist species offset the population decline of vulnerable forest specialists in the plantation. Our results reveal significant impacts of forest-to-oil palm conversion on freshwater biota, particularly taxa richness and composition (but not aggregate abundance). Although preserving riparian buffers in the plantations can mitigate the loss of various aquatic species, it cannot conserve primary forest communities. Therefore, safeguarding primary forests from the oil palm expansion is crucial, and further research is needed to address riparian buffers as a promising mitigation strategy in agricultural areas.

AB - The expansion of oil palm plantations has led to land-use change and deforestation in the tropics, which has affected biodiversity. Although the impacts of the crop on terrestrial biodiversity have been extensively reviewed, its effects on freshwater biodiversity remain relatively unexplored. We reviewed the research assessing the impacts of forest-to-oil palm conversion on freshwater biota and the mitigating effect of riparian buffers on these impacts. We searched for studies comparing taxa richness, species abundance, and community composition of macroinvertebrates, amphibians, and fish in streams in forests (primary and disturbed) and oil palm plantations with and without riparian buffers. Then, we conducted a meta-analysis to quantify the overall effect of the land-use change on the 3 taxonomic groups. Twenty-nine studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. On average, plantations lacking buffers hosted 44% and 19% fewer stream taxa than primary and disturbed forests, respectively. Stream taxa on plantations with buffers were 24% lower than in primary forest and did not differ significantly from disturbed forest. In contrast, stream community composition differed between forests and plantations regardless of the presence of riparian buffers. These differences were attributed to agrochemical use and altered environmental conditions in the plantations, including temperature changes, worsened water conditions, microhabitat loss, and food and shelter depletion. On aggregate, abundance did not differ significantly among land uses because increases in generalist species offset the population decline of vulnerable forest specialists in the plantation. Our results reveal significant impacts of forest-to-oil palm conversion on freshwater biota, particularly taxa richness and composition (but not aggregate abundance). Although preserving riparian buffers in the plantations can mitigate the loss of various aquatic species, it cannot conserve primary forest communities. Therefore, safeguarding primary forests from the oil palm expansion is crucial, and further research is needed to address riparian buffers as a promising mitigation strategy in agricultural areas.

U2 - 10.1111/cobi.14172

DO - 10.1111/cobi.14172

M3 - Review

C2 - 37650444

VL - 38

SP - 1

EP - 14

JO - Conservation Biology

JF - Conservation Biology

SN - 0888-8892

IS - 1

M1 - e14172

ER -

ID: 366509246