Epiphytic orchid diversity and community composition in managed and natural moist evergreen Afromontane forest in SW Ethiopia

In SW Ethiopia, the moist evergreen Afromontane forest has become extremely fragmented and most of the remnants are intensively managed for coffee cultivation (Coffea arabica), with considerable impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Because epiphytic orchids are potential indicators for forest quality and a proxy for overall forest biodiversity, we assessed the effect of forest management and forest fragmentation on epiphytic orchid diversity. We selected managed forest sites from both large and small forest remnants and compared their epiphytic orchid diversity with the diversity of natural unfragmented forest. We surveyed 339 canopy trees using rope climbing techniques. Orchid richness decreased and community composition changed, from the natural unfragmented forest, over the large managed forest fragments to the small managed forest fragments. This indicates that both forest management and fragmentation contribute to the loss of epiphytic orchids. Both the removal of large canopy trees typical for coffee management, and the occurrence of edge effects accompanying forest fragmentation are likely responsible for species loss and community composition changes. Even though some endangered orchid species persist even in the smallest fragments, large managed forest fragments are better options for the conservation of epiphytic orchids than small managed forests. Our results ultimately show that even though shade coffee cultivation is considered as a close-to-nature practice and is promoted as biodiversity conservation friendly, it cannot compete with the epiphytic orchid conservation benefit generated by unmanaged moist evergreen Afromontane forests.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Hundera, Kitessa, Aerts, Raf, De Beenhouwer, Matthias, van Overtveld, Koen, Helsen, Kenny, Muys, Bart, Honnay, Olivier (2013). Dataset: Epiphytic orchid diversity and community composition in managed and natural moist evergreen Afromontane forest in SW Ethiopia. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.788095

DOI retrieved: 2013

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.788095
Author Hundera, Kitessa
Given Name Kitessa
Family Name Hundera
More Authors
Aerts, Raf
De Beenhouwer, Matthias
van Overtveld, Koen
Helsen, Kenny
Muys, Bart
Honnay, Olivier
Source Creation 2013
Publication Year 2013
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Hundera_2013
Subject Areas
Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: Both forest fragmentation and coffee cultivation negatively affect epiphytic orchid diversity in Ethiopian moist evergreen Afromontane forests
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2012.10.029
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2013
Source: Biological Conservation
Authors: Hundera Kitessa , Aerts Raf , De Beenhouwer Matthias , van Overtveld Koen , Helsen Kenny , Muys Bart , Honnay Olivier .