Title of article
Thresholds in the long-term responses of breeding birds to forest cover and fragmentation
Author/Authors
Zuckerberg، نويسنده , , Benjamin and Porter، نويسنده , , William F.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
11
From page
952
To page
962
Abstract
Mitigating the effects of habitat loss requires estimating the minimum amount of habitat necessary for the persistence of wildlife populations in a changing landscape. Assessing minimum habitat amounts, however, relies on identifying ecological thresholds in species’ responses to landscape change. Using two repeated state-wide atlases, our objective was to investigate the responses of 25 forest birds to a range of forest cover and fragmentation. Repeat atlases allow for the analysis of four population dynamics including: (1) colonization, (2) persistence, (3) extinction, and (4) absence. Our objective was to test the hypothesis that forest birds demonstrated thresholds in these four basic dynamics to varying amounts of forest cover and fragmentation.
nd thresholds to be a common, though not pervasive, characteristic of how forest birds respond to forest cover and pattern. We found that the probability of persistence was positively correlated with forest cover and 22 species demonstrated threshold responses. In addition, 15 of 25 birds demonstrated discrete thresholds in extinction dynamics. The existence of a colonization threshold has received significantly less attention in ecology. We also found that 17 out of 25 species demonstrated thresholds in their colonization response to a greater amount of forest cover. The effects of forest fragmentation, independent of forest amount, were less clear. We found support for incorporating the effects of fragmentation, but this fragmentation effect was found both below and above threshold points. We conclude that incorporating ecological thresholds in environmental planning should be species-specific and focus on populations on the verge of rapid ecological change.
Keywords
Habitat fragmentation , New York State , Extinction threshold , ecological threshold , Colonization threshold , Habitat loss , atlases , Forest birds
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
1908416
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