Effect of Habitat Alteration On Herpetofaunal Assemblages on Evergreen Forest in Mizoram, North-East India

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Date

1999

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Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun

Abstract

The response of frogs and Lizards to habitat alteration was studied in South Mizoram. Chronoseres were selected such that two successional gradient were represented- jhum fallows regenerating to mature forest. and jhum allows converted to teak plantations. Herpetofauna were sampled by three techniques- strip transects, pitfall trapping. and systematic searching. Species richness of herpetofauna increased along the jhum-mature forest gradient. However. teak plantation had a depauperate herpetofauna. similar in composition to the 1- year jhul1l fallows. All frogs and lizards were c1assilied into 6 guilds on the basis of their activity period (diurnal or nocturnal) along with whether they were terrestrial , arboreoterrestrial or arboreal. Analysis of the strip-transect data showed that there were distinct differences in the distribution and abundance patterns of diurnal and nocturnal species. To examine patterns, multidimensional scaling (MDS) was used for indirect gradient analysis in two ways- firstly to summarize differences between sites and secondly, to explore possible associations between herpetofaunal guilds and habitat parameters across categories. The MDS differentiated two different groups of habitat variables. One group makes up the gross structural components of the habitats. while the other represents microhabitat parameters. All guilds were more strongly associated with trends in microhabitat distribution. than macrohabitat-parameters. while species richness showed diffuse associations with habitat parameters. The assemblages in the I to 10 yr. jhum fallows and teak plantations were dominated by a set of terrestrial and arboreo-terrestrial lizard species. Most of those species are distributed widely. either in the Indian subcontinent. or further east and south. into South-east Asia. On the other hand. a number of frogs and some lizards were restricted to mature forest. Most of these species are restricted either to North-east India. or to the study area itself. and some are apparently hitherto undescribed species. The fact that so many narrowly distributed species were found in mature forest has obvious conservation implications. Overall. the results suggest that in a mosaic of habitats resulting from jhum-cultivation. even remnants of primary forest may be of immense importance for persistence and recolonization by mature forest herpetofauna. Teak plantations offer a very marginal habitat for a large set of herpetofauna. even after a long period of growth.

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Herpetofauna, Amphibians, Reptiles, Species assemblages, Evergreen forest, Mizoram, Habitat alteration, Impact, North east India

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