Edge effect of low-traffic forest roads on bird communities in secondary production forests in central Europe

被引:0
作者
Miroslav Šálek
Jana Svobodová
Petr Zasadil
机构
[1] Czech University of Life Sciences,Department of Ecology, Faculty of Environmental Sciences
[2] Institute of Vertebrate Biology,undefined
[3] Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,undefined
来源
Landscape Ecology | 2010年 / 25卷
关键词
Biodiversity; Bird assemblages; Czech Republic; Edge effect; Habitat fragmentation; Landscape structure; Point count method;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Worldwide forests fragmentation has lead to a massive increase of habitat edges, creating both negative and positive impacts on birds. While busy highways dissecting forested areas create edges which are known to reduce bird densities due to the disturbing effect of noise, the impacts of logging forest roads with low traffic volumes have rarely been studied. In this study, we compared species richness and similarity of canopy, cavity and shrub guilds of birds along low-traffic forest roads, in forest interior, and at forest edges in secondary forests in central Europe, where the forests have passed through extensive changes toward uniformly compact growths dominated by production conifers. Although we found tree diversity as positively affecting bird richness across all habitats, the bird richness along forest roads was higher than in forest interior but lower than along forest edges. The shrub guild of birds along forest roads resembled this guild along forest edges while canopy and cavity guilds at the roads were more similar to these guilds in forest interior. Forest interior had the highest probability for some guild to be absent. We conclude that low-traffic roads lead to increase of habitat heterogeneity in structurally poor forests and attract birds due to additional habitat attributes—including better light conditions—that are scarce in forest interior. Therefore, broader support for higher structural diversification of uniform plantations in central European production forests would benefit bird communities inhabiting these areas.
引用
收藏
页码:1113 / 1124
页数:11
相关论文
共 140 条
[1]  
Aitken KEH(2002)Nest-site reuse patterns for a cavity-nesting bird community in interior British Columbia Auk 119 391-402
[2]  
Wiebe KL(1994)Open corridors in a heavily forested landscape: impact on shrubland and forest-interior birds Wildl Soc Bull 22 339-347
[3]  
Martin K(2006)Intensive game keeping, coppicing and butterflies: the story of Milovicky Wood, Czech Republic For Ecol Manag 237 353-365
[4]  
Askins RA(2004)Bird assemblages in forest fragments within Mediterranean mosaics created by wild fires Landscape Ecol 19 663-675
[5]  
Benes J(1993)The effects of conifer forest design and management on abundance and diversity of rove beetles (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae)—implications for conservation Biol Conserv 64 67-76
[6]  
Cizek O(2006)Nesting success of a songbird in a complex floodplain forest landscape in Illinois, USA: local fragmentation vs. vegetation structure Landscape Ecol 21 525-537
[7]  
Dovala J(1992)vegetation responses to edge environments in old-growth Douglas-fir forests Ecol Appl 2 387-396
[8]  
Konvicka M(2003)Options for managing early-successional forest and shrubland bird habitats in the northeastern United States For Ecol Manag 185 179-191
[9]  
Brotons L(1992)Ecological processes that affect populations in complex landscapes Oikos 65 169-175
[10]  
Herrando S(2008)Accessible habitat: an improved measure of the effects of habitat loss and roads on wildlife populations Landscape Ecol 23 159-168