Title of article
The age and amount of regrowth forest in fragmented brigalow landscapes are both important for woodland dependent birds
Author/Authors
Bowen، نويسنده , , Michiala E. and McAlpine، نويسنده , , Clive A. and Seabrook، نويسنده , , Leonie M. and House، نويسنده , , Alan P.N. and Smith، نويسنده , , Geoffrey C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
9
From page
3051
To page
3059
Abstract
In highly-modified agricultural landscapes, regrowth (secondary) forest on abandoned farmland offers the potential for passive landscape restoration for biodiversity conservation. While numerous studies have investigated the ecological values of regrowth for fauna recovery at the local-level (1–10 ha), there is a dearth of studies quantifying the contribution of regrowth forest at the landscape-level (100–1000s ha). To address this critical knowledge gap we question how the age and amount of regrowth forest in the landscape influence species richness and abundance of mature forest dependent species? Using woodland dependent birds in fragmented sub-tropical brigalow landscapes in southern Queensland, Australia, we applied model averaging and hierarchical partitioning analyses to test and rank the relative importance of the amount of regrowth forest in the landscape in three age classes (<15, 15–30, and >30 years) compared to local (grazing disturbance, abundance of aggressive miners, mistletoe abundance and patch age) and landscape measures of habitat (amount of mature forest and number of mature forest patches). Response variables included the species richness of woodland dependent birds and sub-groupings of foraging guilds, and the abundance of selected individual species. The importance of explanatory variables differed considerably among response groups. Local attributes, such as patch age and the abundance of mistletoe plants, had the strongest influences on woodland dependent birds. However, we found that the amount of regrowth forest, particularly >30 years, also had a strong influence on both species richness and abundance. This study confirms that regrowth, especially older regrowth, can make an important contribution to landscape restoration in highly-modified agricultural landscapes.
Keywords
Passive landscape restoration , Acacia harpophylla , Habitat amount , Spatial Configuration , Secondary forests , age structure
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
1907968
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