SNAG AVAILABILITY AND COMMUNITIES OF CAVITY-NESTING BIRDS IN TROPICAL VERSUS TEMPERATE FORESTS

被引:69
|
作者
GIBBS, JP
HUNTER, ML
MELVIN, SM
机构
[1] UNIV MAINE,DEPT WILDLIFE,ORONO,ME 04469
[2] MASSACHUSETTS DIV FISHERIES & WILDLIFE,FIELD HEADQUARTERS,WESTBOROUGH,MA 01581
关键词
CAVITY NESTING BIRDS; DEAD TREES; FOREST MANAGEMENT; LATITUDINAL VARIATION; SNAG AVAILABILITY; SNAG DENSITY; TREE MORTALITY; TROPICAL BIRDS;
D O I
10.2307/2389188
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Standing dead trees (snags) are critical foraging and nesting sites for animals, notably birds, yet little is known about snag dynamics or communities of cavity nesting birds in low latitude forests. In a comparison among 10 New World forests, we observed that snags in tropical and subtropical forests (N = 5 sites) occurred at lower densities (3.5-20.5 snags/ha versus 21.2-49.3 snags/ha) and had larger average diameters (27.6-34.2 cm versus 11.2-31.2 cm) than snags in temperate and boreal forests (N = 5 sites). No latitudinal trends were evident in average density of live stems or average snag height. An analysis of avifaunal lists from these sites indicated that low latitude forests supported 2.5 times as many cavity nesting species and approximately equal numbers of primary cavity excavating species as high latitude forests. If tropical forests have fewer snags, more cavity nesters, and relatively fewer cavity excavating species than temperate forests, limitations on nest-site availability could be more severe in lower than higher latitude forests. The availability of snags for birds should thus be considered by tropical forest managers, as it is by many temperate forest managers.
引用
收藏
页码:236 / 241
页数:6
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [1] The standing dead: Importance of snags for cavity-nesting birds in tropical periurban forests
    Rueda-Hernandez, Rafael
    Ruiz-Sanchez, Angelina
    MacGregor-Fors, Ian
    Renton, Katherine
    WILSON JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY, 2023, 135 (01): : 85 - +
  • [2] Edge effects on nesting success of cavity-nesting birds in fragmented forests
    Deng, WH
    Gao, W
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2005, 126 (03) : 363 - 370
  • [3] Snag density and use by cavity-nesting birds in managed stands of the Black Hills National Forest
    Spiering, DJ
    Knight, RL
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2005, 214 (1-3) : 40 - 52
  • [4] Aspen snag dynamics, cavity-nesting birds, and trophic cascades in Yellowstone's northern range
    Hollenbeck, Jeff P.
    Ripple, William J.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2008, 255 (3-4) : 1095 - 1103
  • [5] Habitat selection of cavity-nesting birds in the Hyrcanian deciduous forests of northern Iran
    Assadi, Saeedeh Bani
    Kaboli, Mohammad
    Etemad, Vahid
    Khanaposhtani, Maryam Ghadiri
    Tohidifar, Mohammad
    ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2015, 30 (05) : 889 - 897
  • [6] Snag Characteristics and Cavity-Nesting Birds in the Unmanaged Post-Fire Northeastern Canadian Boreal Forest
    Lowe, Jeovanna
    Pothier, David
    Savard, Jean-Pierre L.
    Rompre, Ghislain
    Bouchard, Mathieu
    SILVA FENNICA, 2011, 45 (01) : 55 - 67
  • [7] Nest biology of urban populations of cavity-nesting birds
    B. D. Kuranov
    Contemporary Problems of Ecology, 2009, 2 : 240 - 247
  • [8] The effects of postfire salvage logging on cavity-nesting birds
    Hutto, Richard L.
    Gallo, Susan M.
    CONDOR, 2006, 108 (04): : 817 - 831
  • [9] Availability of standing trees for large cavity-nesting birds in the eastern boreal forest of Quebec, Canada
    Vaillancourt, Marie-Andree
    Drapeau, Pierre
    Gauthier, Sylvie
    Robert, Michel
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2008, 255 (07) : 2272 - 2285
  • [10] Nest biology of urban populations of cavity-nesting birds
    Kuranov, B. D.
    CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS OF ECOLOGY, 2009, 2 (03) : 240 - 247