威斯康星州景观组成和布局对繁殖水禽配对丰度的影响

IF 1.5 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 Environmental Science
Drew N. Fowler, Jason M. Winiarski, Christopher D. Pollentier, Ronald C. Gatti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

栖息地的丧失和破碎化对世界各地的鸟类繁殖造成了负面影响。在所有鸟类类群中,依赖草原的鸟类的繁殖数量损失比例最大,而依赖湿地的鸟类则实现了总体净增长,部分原因是集中开展了保护工作。然而,依赖湿地的鸟类中的一些物种在年周期中对非湿地土地覆被类型有很强的依赖性,因此可能对高地(如草原)土地覆被组成的减少和配置的改变同样敏感。我们探讨了在美国威斯康星州农业密集型地貌中,土地覆被组成和配置对野鸭(Anas platyrhynchos)和蓝翅茶隼(Spatula discors)这两种繁殖栖息地通性物种繁殖对数的影响。由于发生了广泛的景观改变和栖息地破碎化,我们预计野鸭与蓝翅水鸭等必须在草地上筑巢的物种相比,对不同景观组成的反应更加功利。我们利用直升机进行了8年(2001-2003年、2006-2009年和2012年)的调查,并利用遥感土地覆被数据研究了栖息地关联对繁殖配对相对丰度的影响。模型选择结果表明,景观组成模型优于两种鸟类的景观配置模型和空模型。与我们的预测一致,我们发现与蓝翅茶隼相比,野鸭的繁殖对数受到更多土地覆被协变量的积极影响。蓝翅鷸和野鸭的繁殖对数都与浮出灌木丛和灌木丛湿地以及高地草地组成的增加呈正相关。此外,我们还发现野鸭繁殖对与森林湿地、香蒲(Typha sp.)湿地和开阔水域湿地类型呈正相关,而预测的蓝翅鸊鶿繁殖对丰度与森林湿地呈负相关,且呈非线性关系,当调查地段中香蒲湿地占 30% 以上、开阔水域湿地占 20% 以上时,蓝翅鸊鶿繁殖对丰度下降。以香蒲为主的湿地和开阔水域湿地覆盖类型数量的增加为蓝翅鸊鶿提供的栖息地相对较少,这可能反映了农业集约化和水文稳定化可能导致的栖息地组成的广泛变化。保护现有的筑巢土地植被类型或恢复靠近高地草地植被的水文动态萌发湿地的活动可使这两个物种共同受益。
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The influence of landscape composition and configuration on breeding waterfowl pair abundance in Wisconsin

The influence of landscape composition and configuration on breeding waterfowl pair abundance in Wisconsin
Habitat loss and fragmentation have negatively impacted breeding birds across the world. Across guilds, grassland-dependent birds have experienced the largest proportional loss of their breeding population while wetland-dependent birds have realized overall net gains in part due to focused conservation efforts. However, some species within the wetland-dependent guild have a strong dependence on non-wetland land cover types during the annual cycle and therefore may be equally sensitive to reductions in the composition and altered configuration of upland landcover, such as grasslands. We explored the influence of landcover composition and configuration on the number of breeding pairs of a breeding habitat generalist, the mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), and a grassland-dependent breeding species, the blue-winged teal (Spatula discors), in agriculturally-intensive landscapes of Wisconsin, USA. Because of the extensive landscape alteration and habitat fragmentation that has occurred, we expected mallards to have a more utilitarian response to varying landscape composition compared to a grassland nesting obligate like blue-winged teal. We used helicopter surveys conducted across 8 years (2001–2003, 2006–2009, and 2012) and remotely-sensed land cover data to investigate the influence of habitat associations on relative abundance of breeding pairs. Model selection indicated that landscape composition models outperformed landscape configuration and null models for both species. Consistent with our predictions, we found that mallard pair counts were positively influenced by a greater number of land cover covariates compared to blue-winged teal. Both blue-winged teal and mallard breeding pairs were positively related to increased composition of emergent and scrub-shrub wetlands as well as upland grassland. Additionally, we found that mallard pairs were positively related to forested, cattail (Typha sp.), and open water wetland types, whereas predicted blue-winged teal pair abundance was negatively related to forested wetlands and had a nonlinear relationship and declined when surveyed land sections were comprised of more than 30% cattail-dominated wetlands and 20% open-water wetlands. Increased quantities of cattail-dominated and open-water wetland cover types comparatively provide less habitat for blue-winged teal and may reflect broader shifts in habitat composition that have likely resulted from agricultural intensification and stabilized hydrology. Conservation activities that preserve existing nesting land cover types or restore hydrologically-dynamic emergent wetlands in proximity to upland grassland cover could mutually benefit both species.
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来源期刊
Wildlife Society Bulletin
Wildlife Society Bulletin BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
13.30%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Wildlife Society Bulletin is a journal for wildlife practitioners that effectively integrates cutting edge science with management and conservation, and also covers important policy issues, particularly those that focus on the integration of science and policy. Wildlife Society Bulletin includes articles on contemporary wildlife management and conservation, education, administration, law enforcement, and review articles on the philosophy and history of wildlife management and conservation. This includes: Reports on practices designed to achieve wildlife management or conservation goals. Presentation of new techniques or evaluation of techniques for studying or managing wildlife. Retrospective analyses of wildlife management and conservation programs, including the reasons for success or failure. Analyses or reports of wildlife policies, regulations, education, administration, law enforcement. Review articles on the philosophy and history of wildlife management and conservation. as well as other pertinent topics that are deemed more appropriate for the Wildlife Society Bulletin than for The Journal of Wildlife Management. Book reviews that focus on applied research, policy or wildlife management and conservation.
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