Title of article
Effects of habitat fragmentation on avian nesting success: a review of the evidence at multiple spatial scales Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Scott E. Stephens، نويسنده , , David N. Koons، نويسنده , , Jay J. Rotella، نويسنده , , David W. Willey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
10
From page
101
To page
110
Abstract
We reviewed published literature to examine the effect of habitat fragmentation on avian nesting success at three spatial scales (i.e., edge, patch, and landscape scales). We identified 86 relevant manuscripts that provided 117 individual tests of hypotheses regarding the effects of habitat fragmentation on nesting success. Most papers and reviews on this topic have been narrow in scope and have not examined multiple spatial scales. However, our results suggest that the scale at which fragmentation is measured (i.e., edge, patch and landscape) and the duration of the study do influence the probability that a study will detect a fragmentation effect. Studies that measured fragmentation at landscape scales and studies conducted over several years were more likely to detect effects of fragmentation on nesting success. A recent review of research on nest predators and habitat fragmentation found a very similar scale-dependent pattern; predator effects were more prevalent when fragmentation occurs at landscape scales than patch or edge scales. Based on these findings, we recommend future research on the topic should be conducted at the landscape scale, over several years, and incorporate accompanying work on nest-predator ecology. Correspondingly, conservation actions that limit fragmentation at landscape scales should have positive impacts on nesting success rates and bird populations.
Keywords
birds , habitat fragmentation , Nesting success , Spatial scales , Landscape metrics
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
836681
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