美国加州南部旱地原生灌木密度对鸟类群落的影响。

IF 2.3 Q2 ECOLOGY
Zoë Hillier-Weltman, C J Lortie, Mario Zuliani
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引用次数: 0

摘要

荒漠生态系统中关键景观特征(如灌木和其他基础植物)之间的相互作用会影响鸟类群落的聚集。鸟类经常利用这些灌木提供的资源和微栖息地作为食物、栖息场所和热避难所。公民科学数据可广泛获取,可用于检查精细尺度的鸟类分布。将这些可获得的数据与关键因素(如原生灌木)相结合,可用于保护实践。eBird数据提供了跨越区域生态梯度检查鸟类群落的机会。利用eBird,我们验证了灌木密度和该地区不同地点之间的相对干旱差异塑造了整个加州中部旱地鸟类群落结构的假设。灌丛密度正影响鸟类群落的观测率。减少干旱增加了鸟类与灌木的正相关关系。像eBird这样的公民科学数据为在精细的空间尺度上测试预测提供了希望,进一步的研究可以探索其他地区的数据的可用性和报告——特别是在受到全球气候变化巨大压力的旱地。在气候变化和荒漠化加剧的情况下,干旱地区的简单景观特征,如原生灌木密度和覆盖度,为鸟类群落保护和潜在栖息地恢复提供了可行的前进道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The influence of native shrub density on bird communities in the southern drylands of California, USA.

Interactions between key landscape features in desert ecosystems such as shrubs and other foundation plants can influence avian community assembly. Bird species often use resources and microhabitats provided by these shrubs for food, perching sites, and as thermal refuges. Citizen science data are broadly accessible and can be used to examine fine-scale avian distribution. Coupling this accessible data with key factors, such as native shrubs, can be used for conservation practices. eBird data offers the opportunity to examine avian communities across regional ecological gradients. Using eBird, we tested the hypothesis that shrub density and relative differences in aridity among sites within this region shape the structure of bird communities throughout Central California drylands. Shrub density positively influenced the observation rates of avian communities sampled. Decreasing aridity increased the positive associations of birds with shrubs. Citizen science data such as eBird offers promise for testing predictions at fine spatial scales, and further research can explore availability and reporting of data for other regions - particularly in drylands subject to substantial pressures from climate change globally. Simple landscape features in drylands, such as native shrub density and cover, offer a viable path forward for avian community conservation and potential habitat restoration in drylands in the face of a changing climate and increasing desertification.

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