繁殖缓慢的超级琴鸟的首选筑巢栖息地是罕见的,受到澳大利亚世界遗产区内“黑夏”大火(2019-2020)的不成比例的影响

Eric J Hughes, V. Austin, Fiona Backhouse, Alex C. Maisey, Kelsie A Lopez, Chloe S. Mikles, Karan J. Odom, J. Welbergen, Anastasia H. Dalziell
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摘要

了解巢址选择对制定有效的保护管理行动至关重要。超级七琴鸟(Menura novaehollandiae)是受到澳大利亚前所未有的2019-2020年特大火灾广泛影响的众多特有物种之一。在5个月的时间里,这种繁殖缓慢的物种的整个范围估计有43%被烧毁,对中心亚种新荷兰m.n.的影响最大(55%)。在这些特大火灾发生的四个月前,我们在大蓝山世界遗产区内(15400平方公里)对超级琴鸟的巢址栖息地选择进行了实地研究,该区域是超级琴鸟中心亚种的关键据点。我们发现,在局部尺度上,琴鸟的筑巢地点更有可能出现在以茂密的树冠树木和丰富的热带雨林元素(如藤蔓和树蕨)为特征的栖息地。在景观尺度上,琴鸟的巢最可能建在雨林中;这种对火灾敏感的栖息地类型只占大蓝山世界遗产地区的1%。巢的发生概率也随坡度的增加而增加。我们还发现,在2019-2020年的特大火灾中,大蓝山世界遗产区内超过74%的筑巢栖息地被烧毁,其中包括80%的高度适合筑巢的地区。这些结果表明,这些巨型火灾对超级琴鸟的影响可能比目前认为的要大。考虑到雨林作为超级琴鸟的筑巢栖息地的重要性,管理者应该优先考虑恢复它,并保护它免受未来火灾的影响。更广泛地说,我们的研究结果说明了大规模的灾难性事件——比如特大火灾——是如何不成比例地影响生物生命周期中对特定点至关重要的栖息地的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preferred nesting habitat of the slow-breeding Superb Lyrebird is rare and was disproportionately impacted by Australia’s “Black Summer” megafires (2019–2020) within a World Heritage Area
Understanding nest site selection is critical to developing effective conservation management actions. The Superb Lyrebird (Menura novaehollandiae) is one of many endemic species extensively impacted by Australia’s unprecedented 2019–2020 megafires. Over a period of 5 months, an estimated 43% of the entire range of this slow-breeding species was burnt, with the biggest impact on the central subspecies M. n. novaehollandiae (55%). Four months prior to these megafires, we conducted a field study of nest site habitat selection in the Superb Lyrebird within the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area (15,400 km 2): a key stronghold of the central subspecies of the Superb Lyrebird. We found that at the local scale, lyrebird nest sites were more likely to be found in habitats characterized by dense canopy trees and rich in rainforest elements such as vines and treeferns. At the landscape scale, lyrebird nests were most likely to be constructed in rainforest; this fire-sensitive habitat type made up only 1% of the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area. The probability of nest occurrence also increased with slope. We also found that >74% of all nesting habitat within the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area burned in the 2019–2020 megafires, including 80% of areas of high suitability for nesting. These results suggest that the impact of these megafires on Superb Lyrebirds may be greater than currently thought. Given the importance of rainforest as nesting habitat for the superb lyrebird, managers should prioritize its restoration and protect it from future fire events. More broadly, our results illustrate how large-scale catastrophic events—such as megafires—can disproportionately affect habitats critical to specific points within an organism’s life cycle.
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