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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The magnitude of anthropogenic landscape change in tropical montane biodiversity hotspots
and its relationship with biodiversity is a global issue that remains ‘locked-in’ in the broad
narrative of tropical change in Africa. Over a montane biodiversity hotspot of Madagascar
highlands (Ankaratra Massif), we conducted analysis on land cover change with Landsat
satellite sensor data to identify the magnitude of change (1995–2016) and on the habitat
change–amphibian diversity relationship to understand links with biodiversity. The results
evidenced that 17.8% of the biodiversity hotspot experienced change in land cover in only
20 years. That pressured the already threatened forests, particularly since 2005. Of the total
forest area in 1995 (2062.7 ha), 21.5% was cleared by 2016 (1618.3 ha). Changes in forest
cover followed a bidirectional pattern. While in the period 1995–2005, forests expanded at
a rate of 2.0% year−1 (from 2062.7 to 2524.8 ha), the area declined between 2005 and 2016
at a rate of −4.1% year−1, fourfold the rate reported nationally for Madagascar (−1.1%
year−1). Forest-to-shrubland transitions emerged as being of increasing concern to forest
integrity. We identifed a signifcant link between habitat change and amphibian diversity,
but only for species richness. Counter to expectations, no signifcant relationship was found
between species richness and deforestation rates, and between microendemism rates and
any of the habitat change variables. Species richness responded to the spatiotemporal
variability in vegetation dynamics represented by the standard deviation of the Normalized
Diferenced Vegetation Index (NDVI_std). Species richness was strongly negatively related
to NDVI_std in the short-term (R2=0.91, p=0.003) and long-term (R2=0.69, p=0.03),
increasing where the spatiotemporal variability in NDVI was lower. The magnitude of
changes in this biodiversity hotspot suggests that region-specifc assessments are necessary
in the context of the tropical change narrative in Africa and should consider conservation
policies tailored for local conditions. Reducing deforestation and land conversion rates
through a management plan codesigned with local communities is urgent. Habitat change
appears to impact on amphibian diversity by altering the functional attributes of the habitat
and not just by reducing habitat extent. NDVI_std seems a relevant indirect metric for
monitoring such change although other biophysical attributes obtained from satellite sensor
data should be integrated and explored.
Description
Keywords
Land cover change Forest loss Remote sensing mapping Amphibian diversity Tropical montane cloud forest Natural reserves
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Monteiro, A.T., Rosa, S., Andreone, F., Ndriantsoa, S., Rakotonanahary, T., Dawson, J., Rabemananjara, F. C. E., Rabibisoa, N. H. C., Lucas, R. & Crottini, A. (2025). Anthropogenic landscape change and amphibian diversity in tropical montane biodiversity hotspots: insights from satellite remote sensing in the Madagascar highlands. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 27, 7219–7242. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-023-04187-9
Publisher
Springer Nature