Laura L. de Sosa

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Forest degradation is increasingly recognized as a major threat to global biodiversity and ecosystems’ capacity to provide ecosystem services. This study examined the impacts of forest degradation on soil quality and function in a seasonally dry tropical forest (SDTF) of Ecuador. We compared soil physical-chemical properties, enzymatic activity, particulate organic carbon (POC) and mineral-associated organic carbon (MAOC) along a gradient of SDTF degradation in the dry and rainy season. Our findings showed a consistent and steady reduction in soil quality (total C and N) and function (dehydrogenase and β-glucosidase activity) that paralleled the loss of vegetative structure and diversity along the degradation gradient. Soil physical-chemical properties were less variable and enzymatic activity was generally higher in the dry season compared to the rainy season. We also showed for the first time a significant and uniform decrease in POC and MAOC with ecosystem degradation in a SDTF. The relative proportion of these two components was constant along the gradient except for the most degraded state (arid land), where POC was higher in proportion to MAOC, suggesting that a functional tipping point may be crossed with extreme forest degradation. These findings address an important knowledge gap for SDTFs by showing a consistent loss of soil quality and functionality with degradation and suggest that extreme degradation can result in an alternate state with compromised resilience.
Environmental stress as a consequence of anthropic pressures can affect the physiological condition of animals and cause damage to their DNA. Multiple studies have shown genotoxic effects of different pollutants; however, to our knowledge, the impact of environmental stress on genetic damage has been scarce explored. In some stressful ecosystems, such as seasonally dry tropical forests, the combined effects of anthropogenic activities and ongoing global changes cause increased environmental stresses that could trigger physiological and genetic effects on biodiversity. In this study, we evaluated the changes in the prevalence of genotoxic damage to birds in three states of forest degradation in the Tumbesian Region of Western Ecuador. We used the blood samples of 52 bird species to determine the frequency of micronucleus and nuclear abnormalities in the erythrocytes. Our results showed a significant effect of forest degradation in the proportion of micronucleus and nuclear abnormalities at the community level, localities with higher degradation showed higher levels of abnormalities. However, when analyzing the dominant species, we found contrasting responses. While Amazilis amazilia and Lepidocolaptes souleyetii showed a reduction in the proportion of nuclear abnormalities from the natural to shrub-dominated localities, Troglodytes aedon and Polioptila plumbea showed an increase. We concluded that the degradation process of these tropical forests increases the stress on the bird community generating genotoxic damage to the bird community. Bird responses seem species-specific, which could explain the differences in changes in bird composition reported in other studies.