Title of article
Landscape patterns influencing bird assemblages in a fragmented neotropical cloud forest Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Miguel Angel Mart?nez-Morales، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
10
From page
117
To page
126
Abstract
The cloud forest is one of the rarest and most threatened ecosystems in Mexico, although it contributes highly to the countryʹs biological diversity and provides important ecological services. It is a naturally fragmented ecosystem, but anthropogenic deforestation and fragmentation has been severe. Consequently, it is essential to identify landscape patterns critical for the conservation of cloud forest. In order to understand how landscape patterns affect diversity in this ecosystem, this study explores the consequences of cloud forest fragmentation on bird diversity in eastern Mexico. I analysed the response of bird species richness and abundance as a function of forest fragment size, shape, topographical complexity, altitudinal range, connectivity, and proportion of landscape forested area in a system of 13 cloud forest fragments. Fragment shape was the main characteristic positively related to species richness in the bird community, but a differential response to landscape patterns was also detected. Fragment size was the main characteristic influencing the segment of the bird community depending mostly on forest, that is to say, forest interior and generalist species. In contrast, the extent of forest edge, expressed as fragment shape, produced a positive response of forest border species. Both, forest dependent and border dependent species positively responded to the extent of their suitable habitat. The immediate and most effective ecologically oriented conservation strategy for the region is the conservation of the largest cloud forest fragments.
Keywords
Landscape patterns , Tropical montane cloud forest , Forest fragmentation , bird communities , Mexico
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
837037
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