Breeding birds and vegetation: A quantitative assessment

Edward L. Goldstein , Meir Gross , Richard M. DeGraaf
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引用次数: 39

Abstract

A 5-year study of urban/suburban breeding birds in Amherst, Massachusetts, U.S.A., focused on the relationship between breeding birds and vegetation composition and structure. Over all habitats, and throughout the 5-year period, woody vegetation volume alone accounted for 50% of all the variation in breeding bird species number, and species richness kept increasing even at relatively high vegetation volumes. Sixty-five species of breeding birds were seen during the study, and these can be divided into three groups based on their overall abundance in the sample areas and on their amenability to management: one group is liable to occur anyway, whether or not woody vegetation volume is encouraged as a management strategy; the second group is liable to be well represented where vegetation volume is encouraged but not well represented where it is not, and is the group most suitably targeted for management; the last group consists of birds which are poorly adapted to built-up areas, and which — though detected in small numbers — are not judged likely to increase significantly even where vegetation volume is augmented.

繁殖鸟类与植被:定量评估
对美国马萨诸塞州阿默斯特市的城市/郊区繁殖鸟类进行了为期5年的研究,重点研究了繁殖鸟类与植被组成和结构的关系。在所有生境中,5年时间内,仅木本植被量就占了所有繁殖鸟类物种数量变化的50%,即使在相对较高的植被量下,物种丰富度也在不断增加。研究期间共发现65种繁殖鸟类,根据其在样本地区的总体丰度和对管理的适应性,可将其分为三组:无论是否鼓励木本植被量作为管理策略,一组无论如何都容易发生;第二类人在鼓励植被数量的地方容易得到很好的代表,但在不鼓励植被数量的地方却没有得到很好的代表,并且是最适合管理的目标群体;最后一类是不太适应建筑密集区的鸟类,尽管数量很少,但即使在植被增加的地方,也不能判断它们的数量会显著增加。
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