Record Details

Landscape Context Mediates Avian Habitat Choice in Tropical Forest Restoration

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Title Landscape Context Mediates Avian Habitat Choice in Tropical Forest Restoration
Names Reid, J. Leighton (creator)
Mendenhall, Chase D. (creator)
Abel Rosales, J. (creator)
Zahawi, Rakan A. (creator)
Holl, Karen D. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-03-04 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the Public Library of Science. The published article can be found at: http://www.plosone.org/.
Abstract Birds both promote and prosper from forest restoration. The ecosystem functions birds perform can increase the pace of
forest regeneration and, correspondingly, increase the available habitat for birds and other forest-dependent species. The
aim of this study was to learn how tropical forest restoration treatments interact with landscape tree cover to affect the
structure and composition of a diverse bird assemblage. We sampled bird communities over two years in 13 restoration
sites and two old-growth forests in southern Costa Rica. Restoration sites were established on degraded farmlands in a
variety of landscape contexts, and each included a 0.25-ha plantation, island treatment (trees planted in patches), and
unplanted control. We analyzed four attributes of bird communities including frugivore abundance, nectarivore abundance,
migrant insectivore richness, and compositional similarity of bird communities in restoration plots to bird communities in
old-growth forests. All four bird community variables were greater in plantations and/or islands than in control treatments.
Frugivore and nectarivore abundance decreased with increasing tree cover in the landscape surrounding restoration plots,
whereas compositional similarity to old-growth forests was greatest in plantations embedded in landscapes with high tree
cover. Migrant insectivore richness was unaffected by landscape tree cover. Our results agree with previous studies showing
that increasing levels of investment in active restoration are positively related to bird richness and abundance, but
differences in the effects of landscape tree cover on foraging guilds and community composition suggest that trade-offs
between biodiversity conservation and bird-mediated ecosystem functioning may be important for prioritizing restoration
sites.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Identifier Reid JL, Mendenhall CD, Rosales JA, Zahawi RA, Holl KD (2014) Landscape Context Mediates Avian Habitat Choice in Tropical Forest Restoration. PLoS ONE 9(3): e90573. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0090573

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