TURNOVER OF BREEDING BIRDS IN SMALL FOREST FRAGMENTS - THE SAMPLING COLONIZATION HYPOTHESIS CORROBORATED

被引:96
|
作者
HAILA, Y
HANSKI, IK
RAIVIO, S
机构
关键词
BIRDS IN FOREST FRAGMENTS; COLONIZATION OF SMALL HABITAT FRAGMENTS; CONSERVATION ECOLOGY; ECOLOGICAL SCALING; HABITAT FRAGMENTATION; LANDSCAPE HETEROGENEITY; LOCAL EXTINCTION RECOLONIZATION; SAMPLING COLONIZATION; SOUTHERN FINLAND; TAIGA; TURNOVER;
D O I
10.2307/1940799
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
A sampling view of the colonization of small habitat fragments by birds is based on the assumption that individual birds acquire territories in the fragments randomly, and their occurrence frequencies follow from abundances in the regional species pool. We tested the following predictions of this view using bird census data from a fragment ''archipelago'' in the southern Finnish taiga: (1) the location of breeding pairs varies randomly among the fragments from year to year, and (2) the pattern of species accrual with increasing sample size is similar to random sampling. The data agreed with the predictions. For most species the distribution of pairs in the fragments agreed with the Poisson prediction. The pattern of species turnover in single fragments agreed with the sampling view so that an average fragment had about 10 pairs of 7 species in a single breeding season, and about 40 pairs of 13 species over the 4-yr period. The sampling model is a ''null'' assumption that should be considered when assessing the occurrence of birds in small habitat fragments. This requirement defines methodological imperatives that have often been violated in ornithological studies; we discuss such methodological problems. The sampling model implies that local turnover in small fragments may be a mechanical reflection of change in territory location from year to year and disconnected from population dynamics. In such a case, apparent ''extinctions'' and ''recolonizations'' in single fragments are ecologically trivial. Assessing the interface between sampling colonization and genuine metapopulation dynamics is an urgent challenge for conservation ecology, particularly in temperate and boreal areas.
引用
收藏
页码:714 / 725
页数:12
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [1] Landscape ecology of birds breeding in temperate forest fragments
    Freemark, K.
    Collins, B.
    NCASI Technical Bulletin, 1999, (781 I):
  • [2] Rapid colonization and turnover of birds in a tropical forest treefall gap
    Pollock, Henry S.
    Jones, Todd M.
    Tarwater, Corey E.
    Nishikawa, Elise T.
    Brawn, Jeffrey D.
    JOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY, 2020, 91 (02) : 107 - 117
  • [3] Use of small Atlantic Forest fragments by birds in Southeast Brazil
    Barbosa, Karlla Vanessa de Camargo
    Knogge, Christoph
    Develey, Pedro Ferreira
    Jenkins, Clinton N.
    Uezu, Alexandre
    PERSPECTIVES IN ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2017, 15 (01) : 42 - 46
  • [4] Breeding forest birds of northeastern Connecticut show a long-term population increase and high species turnover
    Craig, Robert J.
    Duguid, Marlyse C.
    Ashton, Mark S.
    WILSON JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY, 2022, 134 (01): : 27 - 42
  • [5] Impacts of rain forest fragmentation on butterflies in northern Borneo: species richness, turnover and the value of small fragments
    Benedick, S.
    Hill, J. K.
    Mustaffa, N.
    Chey, V. K.
    Maryati, M.
    Searle, J. B.
    Schilthuizen, M.
    Hamer, K. C.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2006, 43 (05) : 967 - 977
  • [6] Effects of small-scale habitat disturbance on the ecology of breeding birds in a Vermont (USA) hardwood forest
    Lent, R.A.
    Capen, D.E.
    NCASI Technical Bulletin, 1999, (781 I): : 304 - 305
  • [7] EFFECTS OF SMALL-SCALE HABITAT DISTURBANCE ON THE ECOLOGY OF BREEDING BIRDS IN A VERMONT (USA) HARDWOOD FOREST
    LENT, RA
    CAPEN, DE
    ECOGRAPHY, 1995, 18 (02) : 97 - 108
  • [8] FOREST FRAGMENTS MATTER: A LOOK INTO THE SPECIES RICHNESS AND DIVERSITY PATTERNS OF BIRDS IN A SMALL, ISOLATED, PROTECTED LANDSCAPE IN MINDANAO ISLAND, PHILIPPINES
    Duco, Renz Angelo J.
    Bejar, Simeon Gabriel F.
    Banez, Justin G.
    Fidelino, Jay S.
    Duya, Melizar V.
    Ong, Perry S.
    Duya, Mariano Roy M.
    NATURE CONSERVATION RESEARCH, 2024, 9 (02): : 47 - 60
  • [9] The value of small forest fragments and urban tree canopy for Neotropical migrant birds during winter and migration seasons in Latin American countries: A systematic review
    David Amaya-Espinel, Juan
    Hostetler, Mark E.
    LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2019, 190
  • [10] Single dead trees matter: Small-scale canopy gaps increase the species richness, diversity and abundance of birds breeding in a temperate deciduous forest
    Lewandowski, Pawel
    Przepiora, Fabian
    Ciach, Michal
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2021, 481