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Systematic Temporal Patterns in the Relationship Between Housing Development and Forest Bird Biodiversity

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Title Systematic Temporal Patterns in the Relationship Between Housing Development and Forest Bird Biodiversity
Names Pidgeon, Anna M. (creator)
Flather, Curtis H. (creator)
Radeloff, Volker C. (creator)
Lepczyk, Christopher A. (creator)
Keuler, Nicholas S. (creator)
Wood, Eric M. (creator)
Stewart, Susan I. (creator)
Hammer, Roger B. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-10 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the Society for Conservation Biology and published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. It can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291523-1739.
Abstract As people encroach increasingly on natural areas, one question is how this affects avian biodiversity.
The answer to this is partly scale-dependent. At broad scales, human populations and biodiversity
concentrate in the same areas and are positively associated, but at local scales people and biodiversity are
negatively associated with biodiversity. We investigated whether there is also a systematic temporal trend in
the relationship between bird biodiversity and housing development. We used linear regression to examine
associations between forest bird species richness and housing growth in the conterminous United States over
30 years. Our data sources were the North American Breeding Bird Survey and the 2000 decennial U.S. Census.
In the 9 largest forested ecoregions, housing density increased continually over time. Across the conterminous
United States, the association between bird species richness and housing density was positive for virtually
all guilds except ground nesting birds. We found a systematic trajectory of declining bird species richness
as housing increased through time. In more recently developed ecoregions, where housing density was still
low, the association with bird species richness was neutral or positive. In ecoregions that were developed
earlier and where housing density was highest, the association of housing density with bird species richness
for most guilds was negative and grew stronger with advancing decades. We propose that in general the
relationship between human settlement and biodiversity over time unfolds as a 2-phase process. The first
phase is apparently innocuous; associations are positive due to coincidence of low-density housing with high
biodiversity. The second phase is highly detrimental to biodiversity, and increases in housing density are
associated with biodiversity losses. The long-term effect on biodiversity depends on the final housing density.
This general pattern can help unify our understanding of the relationship of human encroachment and
biodiversity response.
Genre Article
Topic Animals
Identifier Pidgeon, A. M., Flather, C. H., Radeloff, V. C., Lepczyk, C. A., Keuler, N. S., Wood, E. M., Stewart, S. I. and Hammer, R. B. (2014). Systematic Temporal Patterns in the Relationship Between Housing Development and Forest Bird Biodiversity. Conservation Biology, 28(5), 1291–1301. doi:10.1111/cobi.12291

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