Responses of Chilean forest birds to anthropogenic habitat fragmentation across spatial scales

0106 biological sciences 570 Forest fragmentation Biología Cross-scale effects 15. Life on land Fragmentación en paisajes 01 natural sciences Aves - forestales - Chile Birds Aves - Habitat - Chile Habitat use Chile Habitat specialists
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-008-9275-y Publication Date: 2008-09-24T17:47:15Z
ABSTRACT
Although it is recognized that anthropogenic forest fragmentation affects habitat use by organisms across multiple spatial scales, there is uncertainty about these effects. We used a hierarchical sampling design spanning three spatial scales of habitat variability (landscape > patch > within-patch) and generalized mixed-effect models to assess the scale-dependent responses of bird species to fragmentation in temperate forests of southern Chile. The abundances of nine of 20 bird species were affected by interactions across spatial scales. These interactions resulted in a limited effect of within-patch habitat structure on the abundance of birds in landscapes with low forest cover, suggesting that suitable local habitats, such as sites with dense understory cover or large trees, are underutilized or remain unused in highly fragmented landscapes. Habitat specialists and cavity-nesters, such as tree-trunk foragers and tapaculos, were most likely to exhibit interactions across spatial scales. Because providing additional sites with dense understory vegetation or large habitat trees does not compensate the negative effect of the loss of forest area on bird species, conservation strategies should ensure the retention of native forest patches in the mixed-use landscapes.
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