Old growth and secondary forest site occupancy by nocturnal birds in a neotropical landscape

被引:37
作者
Sberze, M. [1 ]
Cohn-Haft, M. [2 ]
Ferraz, G. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Smithsonian Trop Res Inst, Inst Nacl Pesquisas Amazonia, Biol Dynam Forest Fragments Project, BR-69011970 Manaus, Brazil
[2] Inst Nacl de Pesquisas da Amazonia, Ecol Dept & Sci Collect Birds, Manaus, Brazil
[3] Fiocruz MS, Inst Leonidas & Maria Deane, Manaus, Brazil
关键词
secondary forest; old growth; nocturnal birds; occupancy; detection; spatial autocorrelation; Amazon forest; UNCERTAIN FUTURE; LAND-USE; AMAZON; COMMUNITIES; PROBABILITIES; BIODIVERSITY; ASSEMBLAGES; CLIMATE; POTOO; RATES;
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-1795.2009.00312.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
High rates of old growth (OG) forest destruction and difficult farming conditions result in increasing cover of secondary forests (SF) in the Amazon. In this setting, it is opportune to ask which animals use newly available SF and which stay restricted to OG. This study presents a comparison of SF and OG site occupancy by nocturnal birds in terra firme forests of the Amazon Guianan shield, north of Manaus, Brazil. We tested species-specific occupancy predictions for two owls (Lophostrix cristata/Glaucidium hardyi), two potoos (Nyctibius leucopterus/Nyctibius griseus) and two nightjars (Caprimulgus nigrescens/Nyctidromus albicollis). For each pair, we predicted that one species would have higher occupancy in OG while the other would either be indifferent to forest type or favor SF sites. Data were collected in 30 OG and 24 SF sites with monthly samples from December 2007 to December 2008. Our analytic approach accounts for the possibility of detection failure and for spatial autocorrelation in occupancy, thus leading to strong inferences about changes in occupancy between forest types and between species. Nocturnal bird richness and community composition were indistinguishable between OG and SF sites. Owls were relatively indifferent to forest type. Potoos followed the a priori predictions, and one of the nightjars (C. nigrescens) favored SF instead of OG as predicted. Only one species, Nyctib. leucopterus, clearly favored OG. The landscape context of our SF study sites, surrounded by a vast expanse of continuous OG forest, partially explains the resemblance between SF and OG fauna but leaves unexplained the higher occupancy for SF than OG sites for several study species. The causal explanation of high SF occupancy remains an open question, but the result itself motivates further comparisons for other groups, as well as recognition of the conservation potential of SF.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 11
页数:9
相关论文
共 61 条
[1]   Influence of matrix habitats on the occurrence of insectivorous bird species in Amazonian forest framents [J].
Antongiovanni, M ;
Metzger, JP .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2005, 122 (03) :441-451
[2]   The value of primary, secondary and plantation forests for Amazonian birds [J].
Barlow, Jos ;
Mestre, Luiz A. M. ;
Gardner, Toby A. ;
Peres, Carlos A. .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2007, 136 (02) :212-231
[3]  
Blake JG, 2001, AUK, V118, P304, DOI 10.1642/0004-8038(2001)118[0304:BAISGA]2.0.CO
[4]  
2
[5]   Bird assemblages in secondary forests developing after slash-and-burn agriculture in the Brazilian Amazon [J].
Borges, Sergio Henrique .
JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2007, 23 :469-477
[6]  
Borges SH, 2004, J FIELD ORNITHOL, V75, P176, DOI 10.1648/0273-8570-75.2.176
[7]   Bird communities in two types of anthropogenic successional vegetation in central Amazonia [J].
Borges, SH ;
Stouffer, PC .
CONDOR, 1999, 101 (03) :529-536
[8]   Regrowth forests on abandoned agricultural land: A review of their habitat values for recovering forest fauna [J].
Bowen, Michiala E. ;
McAlpine, Clive A. ;
House, Alan P. N. ;
Smith, Geoffrey C. .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2007, 140 (3-4) :273-296
[9]   Momentum drives the crash: Mass extinction in the tropics [J].
Brook, BW ;
Bradshaw, CJA ;
Koh, LP ;
Sodhi, NS .
BIOTROPICA, 2006, 38 (03) :302-305
[10]   Multimodel inference - understanding AIC and BIC in model selection [J].
Burnham, KP ;
Anderson, DR .
SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS & RESEARCH, 2004, 33 (02) :261-304