降雨对城市化赞比西河沿岸森林鸟类种群密度和群落结构的影响

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q2 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Diversity-Basel Pub Date : 2023-10-31 DOI:10.3390/d15111126
Grzegorz Kopij
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引用次数: 0

摘要

组成鸟类群落的物种受到多种环境和内部影响的支配,群落生态学的关键作用是辨别和解释这些影响所产生的模式。其中一些影响因素是生境结构和季节性。本研究旨在探讨鸟类群落结构和种群密度与人类改变生境和差异降雨的关系。这项研究是在纳米比亚东北部赞比西河上一个城市化的河岸森林中进行的。靠近河岸的森林受到人类活动的轻微改变,而更远的森林则受到人类住区的高度改变。采用制图法对鸟类群落进行了定量分析。在2013/14和2015/16两个雨季进行了计数。2013/14年雨季降雨量(428毫米)高于2014/15年雨季(262毫米)。两个季节共录得113种鸟类。然而,2013/14年度和2015/16年度分别记录到91种和101种。两个季节的Sorensen相似指数I = 0.89。两季优势种的比例相似,类群由黑头鹎、红眼鸽子、笑鸽、蓝蜡喙和灰头麻雀组成。两个季节的群落优势度是相同的。两个季节的多样性指数也非常相似。此外,这三个多样性指数在两个季节几乎相同。2015/16年度的总体密度仅略高于2013/14年度。在两个季节中,特定筑巢、喂养、栖息地和居住行会的比例非常相似。总体密度2015/16年略高于2013/14年,但差异无统计学意义。此外,对于任何特定鸟类,两个季节之间的种群密度差异均无统计学意义。然而,在河岸森林的自然部分和改造部分之间,几种鸟类的种群密度在统计上存在显著差异。就繁殖物种的数量和密度而言,鸟类群落多年来可能是稳定的,而不考虑每年降雨量的差异,因为水不是这个栖息地的限制因素。被归类为森林专门型的鸟类似乎受到栖息地转变的负面影响,而通才(过渡带物种)可能从这种转变中受益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effect of Rainfall on the Population Densities and Community Structure of Birds in an Urbanized Zambezi Riparian Forest
The species which make up the avian community are governed by a multitude of environmental and internal influences, and the crucial role of community ecology is to discern and explain the patterns arising from these influences. Some such influences are habitat structure and seasonality. This study aimed to investigate the structure of the avian community and population densities of birds in relation to habitat changes made by man, and in relation to differential rainfall. The study was set up in an urbanized riparian forest on the Zambezi River, NE Namibia. The forest close to the river bank has been slightly altered by human activities, while the one laying further afield has been highly modified by human settlements. The avian community was quantified using the mapping method. Counts were conducted in two wet seasons in 2013/14 and 2015/16. The rainfall was higher in the 2013/14 (428 mm) than the 2014/15 (262 mm) rainy season. In both seasons, 113 bird species were recorded. However, in particular, 91 species were recorded in 2013/14 and 101 in 2015/16. The Sorensen Index of Similarity between those two seasons was I = 0.89. Also, the proportion of dominant species was similar in both seasons, and the group was composed of the Dark-capped Bulbul, Red-eyed Dove, Laughing Dove, Blue Waxbill, and Grey-headed Sparrow. The Community Dominance was identical in both seasons when compared. Also, the diversity indices were very similar in both seasons. Also, all three diversity indices were almost identical in both seasons. The overall density was only slightly higher in 2015/16 than in 2013/14. The proportions of particular nesting, feeding, habitat, and residency guilds were very similar in both seasons when compared. The overall density was slightly higher in 2015/16 than in 2013/14, but the difference was not statistically significant. Also, for any particular bird species, the differences in population density between the two seasons were not statistically significant. Several bird species showed, however, statistically significant differences in their population densities between the natural and transformed portions of the riparian forest. The avian assemblage is probably stable over the years in regard to the number of breeding species and their densities, irrespective of year-to-year differences in rainfall, as water is not a limiting factor in this habitat. Bird species classified as forest specialists appear to be negatively affected by habitat transformation, while generalists (ecotone species) probably benefit from this transformation.
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来源期刊
Diversity-Basel
Diversity-Basel Environmental Science-Ecological Modeling
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
925
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Diversity (ISSN 1424-2818) is an international and interdisciplinary journal of science concerning diversity concept and application, diversity assessment and diversity preservation. It is focused on organismic and molecular diversity. It publishes reviews, regular research papers and short notes in the regular issues. Related news and announcements are also published. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. Therefore, there is no restriction on the length of the papers. Full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced.
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