Abstract
Mediterranean-type ecosystems are one of the most affected environments by habitat loss and fragmentation due to urban development, however only few studies have evaluated the effects of urbanization on the biodiversity of remnant fragments in these ecosystems. This study aims to evaluate the effects of urban development over small mammal assemblages inhabiting isolated forest fragments of an urban area of Chilean Mediterranean zone. We compared abundance and richness of small mammal assemblages of six remnant fragments within an urban matrix, and six fragments similar in area and habitat characteristics with those of urban area, but surrounded by a rural matrix. We found that small mammal assemblages differ considerably among fragments types (urban vs rural), with lack of endemic species from urban fragments and with high proportion of introduced rodents in urban fragments. Furthermore abundance of small mammals was higher in rural than in urban fragments. In urban areas small mammal abundance and richness were not correlated with any of the explanatory variables assessed (woody cover, flora heterogeneity, fragment area, perimeter/area ratio). However in rural fragments small mammal richness was negatively correlated with flora heterogeneity and the abundance of small mammals was positively correlated with perimeter/area ratio. These results reveal important differences within the effects of fragmentation over small mammal assemblages among the two types of fragments assessed. Our findings suggest that in forest fragments isolated by urbanization, larger areas with good quality habitats are not sufficient to maintain native small mammal population.



Similar content being viewed by others
References
Arroyo MTK, Marquet P, Marticorena C, Simonetti J, Cavieres L, Squeo F et al (2004) Chilean winter rainfall-valdivian forests. In: Mittermeier RA, Gil PR, Hoffmann M, Pilgrim J, Brooks T, Mittermeier CG et al (eds) Hotspots revisited: earth’s biologically richest and most endangered terrestrial ecoregions. CEMEX, México, pp 99–103
Aschmann H (1991) Human impact on the biota of Mediterranean-climate region of Chile and California. In: Groves RH, Castri FD (eds) Biogeography of Mediterranean Invasions. Cambridge University Press, pp 33–42
Bierwagen BG (2007) Connectivity in urbanizing landscapes: the importance of habitat configuration, urban area size, and dispersal. Urban Ecosyst 10:29–42
Bolger DT, Allison CA, Sauvajot RM, Potenza P, McCalvin C, Tran D et al (1997) Response of rodents to habitat fragmentation in Coastal Southern California. Ecol Appl 7:552–563
Cavia R, Cueto GR, Suarez OV (2009) Changes in rodent communities according to the landscape structure in an urban ecosystem. Landsc Urban Plan 90:11–19
Cowling RM, Rundel PW, Lamont BB, Kalin Arroyo M, Arianoutsou M (1996) Plant diversity in Mediterranean-climate regions. Trends Ecol Evol 11:362–366
Crooks KR, Suarez AV, Bolger DT (2004) Avian assemblages along a gradient of urbanization in a highly fragmented landscape. Biol Conserv 115:451–462
Eberhardt LL (1978) Transect methods for population studies. J Wildl Manag 42:1–31
Ekernas LS, Mertes KJ (2006) The influence of urbanization, patch size, and habitat type on small mammals communities in the New York Metropolitan Region. Wild Metro, New York
Ellis EC, Klein Goldewijk K, Siebert S, Lightman D, Ramankutty N (2010) Anthropogenic transformation of the biomes, 1700 to 2000. Glob Ecol Biogeogr 19:589–606
Gibb H, Hochuli DF (2002) Habitat fragmentation in an urban environment: large and small fragments support different arthropod assemblages. Biol Conserv 106:91–100
Guirado M, Pino J, Rodà F (2006) Understorey plant species richness and composition in metropolitan forest archipelagos: effects of forest size, adjacent land use and distance to the edge. Glob Ecol Biogeogr 15:50–62
Gutiérrez JR, Meserve PL, Herrera S, Contreras LC, Jaksic FM (1997) Effects of small mammals and vertebrate predators on vegetation in the Chilean semiarid zone. Oecologia 109:398–406
Hannah L, Carr JL, Lankerani A (1995) Human disturbance and natural habitat: a biome level analysis of a global data set. Biodivers Conserv 4:128–155
Iriarte JA, Contreras LC, Jaksic FM (1989) A long-term study of a small-mammal assemblage in the central Chilean Matorral. J Mammal 70:79–87
Jaksic FM, Yáñez JL, Fuentes ER (1981) Assessing a small mammal community in Central Chile. J Mammal 62:391–396
Kelt DA (2000) Small mammal communities in rainforest fragments in Central Southern Chile. Biol Conserv 92:345–358
Kelt DA, Meserve PL, Lang BK (1994) Quantitative habitat associations of small mammals in a temperate rainforest in southern Chile: empirical patterns and the importance of ecological scale. J Mammal 75:890–904
Klausmeyer KR, Shaw MR (2009) Climate change, habitat loss, protected areas and the climate adaptation potential of species in Mediterranean ecosystems worldwide. PLoS One 4:e6392
Markovchick-Nicholls L, Regan HM, Deutschman DH, Widyanata A, Martin B, Noreke L et al (2008) Relationships between human disturbance and wildlife land use in urban habitat fragments. Conserv Biol 22:99–109
McIntyre NE, Knowles-Yánez K, Hope D (2000) Urban ecology as an interdisciplinary field: differences in the use of “urban” between the social and natural sciences. Urban Ecosyst 4:5–24
Meserve PL (1981) Resource partitioning in a Chilean semi-arid small mammal community. J Anim Ecol 50:745–757
Rojas DD, Arrué PM, Valencia GC (2004) Estadísticas del Medio Ambiente 1999–2003. Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas, Santiago
Romero H, Vásquez A (2005) Evaluación ambiental del proceso de urbanización de las cuencas del piedemonte andino de Santiago de Chile. EURE 31:97–118
Sauvajot RM, Buechner M, Kamradt DA, Schonewald CM (1998) Patterns of human disturbance and response by small mammals and birds in chaparral near urban development. Urban Ecosyst 2:279–297
Silva SI (2005) Posiciones tróficas de pequeños mamíferos en Chile: una revisión. Rev Chil Hist Nat 78:589–599
Simonetti JA (1986) On the assessment of trapping success. Acta Theriol 31:5
Simonetti JA (1989) Microhabitat use by small mammals in central Chile. Oikos 56:309–318
Simonetti JA (1999) Diversity and conservation of terrestrial vertebrates in Mediterranean Chile. Rev Chil Hist Nat 72:493–500
Soulé ME, Alberts AC, Bolger DT (1992) The Effects of habitat fragmentation on chaparral plants and vertebrates. Oikos 63:39–47
Tikhonova GN, Tikhonov IA, Bogomolov PL (2006) Impact of a small city on the structure of small mammal fauna in forests of the northeastern Moscow Region. Russ J Ecol 37:278–283
Tilman D, May RM, Lehman CL, Nowak MA (1994) Habitat destruction and the extinction debt. Nature 371:65–66
Torres-Perez F, Navarrete-Droguett J, Aldunate R, Yates TL, Mertz GJ, Vial PA et al (2004) Peridomestic small mammals associated with confirmed cases of human hantavirus disease in southcentral Chile. AmJTrop Med Hyg 70:305–309
Umetsu F, Pardini R (2007) Small mammals in a mosaic of forest remnants and anthropogenic habitats—evaluating matrix quality in an Atlantic forest landscape. Landsc Ecol 22:517–530
Verbeylen G, Bruyn LD, Adriaensen F, Matthysen E (2003) Does matrix resistance influence Red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris L. 1758) distribution in an urban landscape? Landsc Ecol 18:791–805
Vogiatzakis IN, Mannion AM, Griffiths GH (2006) Mediterranean ecosystems: problems and tools for conservation. Prog Phys Geogr 30:175–200
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Fernández, I.C., Simonetti, J.A. Small mammal assemblages in fragmented shrublands of urban areas of Central Chile. Urban Ecosyst 16, 377–387 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-012-0272-1
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-012-0272-1


