Abstract
Agricultural expansion has markedly reduced forests and reconfigured
landscapes. These changes incur a well-known detrimental impact on the
biodiversity of local forest patches, but the effects on species
persistence at broader geographic scales are widely debated. We
investigated how regional diversity is affected by habitat loss,
fragmentation, and cattle grazing, and how species respond to
deforestation both locally and regionally. We also investigated how the
heterogeneity in species distribution (beta-diversity) alters species
responses across scales. The vast majority of the 251 ant species found
in our study were negatively affected by both habitat loss and cattle at
local forest patches, drastically reducing diversity at these patches
compared to pristine forests. Despite local declines in diversity,
however, heavily fragmented landscapes could still retain most species
due to the high heterogeneity in species distribution. Beta-diversity is
the main component of regional diversity, and this component is
maximized when remnant primary habitats in a landscape are spread across
vast areas. Although preserving local diversity may be important for the
adequate functioning of the ecosystem, our results indicate that the
maintenance of many small forest patches in a landscape can buffer
regional biodiversity against local species extinctions. Our results
suggest that even small forest remnants in otherwise deforested
landscapes can prevent most regional-scale species extirpations, and
therefore also merit conservation efforts.