An island of wildlife in a human-dominated landscape: The last fragment of primary forest on the Osa Peninsula's Golfo Dulce coastline, Costa Rica.

  • Beatriz Lopez Gutierrez
  • Angélica M Almeyda Zambrano
  • Sandra L Almeyda Zambrano
  • Carlos A Quispe Gil
  • Stephanie Bohlman
  • Eduardo Avellan Arias
  • Guillermo Mulder
  • Clare Ols
  • Rodolfo Dirzo
  • Anneke M DeLuycker
  • Karen Lewis
  • Eben N Broadbent
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Publication date
January 2019
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Journal
PLoS ONE

Abstract

Habitat loss and fragmentation, together with related edge effects, are the primary cause of global biodiversity decline. Despite a large amount of research quantifying and demonstrating the degree of these effects, particularly in top predators and their prey, most fragmented patches are lost before their conservation value is recognized. This study evaluates terrestrial vertebrates in Playa Sandalo, in the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica, which represents the last patch of "primary" forest in the most developed part of this region. Our study indicates that the diversity of ground species detected within Playa Sandalo rival other areas under active conservation like Lapa Rios Ecolodge. Historical fragmentation, together with the maintenance of...

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