Fine-scale forest structure, not management regime, drives occupancy of a declining songbird, the Olive-sided Flycatcher, in the core of its range

Benjamin Hack, C. A. Cansler, M. Z. Peery, Connor M. Wood
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Abstract

Climate change, management legacies, pest outbreaks, and fire regimes are combining to pose a growing risk of broad-scale loss of forest cover throughout western North America. Already, habitat changes have been linked with declines in numerous bird species; understanding the relative importance of management regimes and habitat structure may be critical to conserving at-risk species. The Olive-sided Flycatcher (Contopus cooperi) is a declining songbird associated with tall, open forests in California’s Sierra Nevada, the core of its breeding range, where the management regimes of the National Park Service (NPS) and U.S. Forest Service (USFS) have led to divergent forest conditions over the past century. We combined a landscape-scale passive acoustic monitoring program, the BirdNET animal sound identification algorithm, and single-season occupancy models to explore the relationships between Olive-sided Flycatchers in the Sierra Nevada and both management regime and fine-scale forest structure. Olive-sided Flycatcher site occupancy increased as canopy cover decreased relative to mean tree diameter, which is consistent with their preference for mature, open forests. These “open forest” conditions were most prevalent on NPS-managed lands, which is consistent with the assumption that the NPS management regime is more faithful to the historical conditions that had supported a larger Olive-sided Flycatcher population than at present. Thus, the support we found for a positive association with USFS-managed lands after controlling for “open forest” suggests that other habitat features are also important. Our results suggest that conservation strategies for Olive-sided Flycatcher breeding habitat should prioritize the protection and generation of open canopies in areas with large trees, as well as the identification of other important habitat features. Prescribed fire, mechanical thinning, and a return of indigenous forest management practices could help to restore historical forest and fire conditions beneficial to this and other species with similar habitat requirements. Fine-scale alterations to forest structure can be implemented much more rapidly and at much broader scales than the imposition of strict protected status, suggesting that there may be multiple pathways to conservation when species respond to habitat at fine spatial scales.
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精细的森林结构,而非管理制度,驱动着一种正在减少的鸣禽--橄榄面飞鸟--在其核心分布区的栖息
气候变化、管理遗留问题、虫害爆发和火灾机制等因素结合在一起,使整个北美西部森林植被大面积丧失的风险越来越大。栖息地的变化已经与许多鸟类物种的减少联系在一起;了解管理制度和栖息地结构的相对重要性可能对保护濒危物种至关重要。橄榄面飞鸟(Contopus cooperi)是一种正在减少的鸣禽,与加利福尼亚内华达山脉的高大、开阔森林有关,这里是其繁殖地的核心,在过去的一个世纪里,美国国家公园管理局(NPS)和美国森林管理局(USFS)的管理制度导致了森林状况的差异。我们将景观尺度的被动声学监测项目、BirdNET动物声音识别算法和单季占用模型结合起来,探讨了内华达山脉橄榄面飞鹊与管理制度和精细尺度森林结构之间的关系。随着树冠覆盖率相对于平均树木直径的降低,橄榄面飞鹊的栖息地占有率也随之增加,这与它们对成熟、开阔森林的偏好是一致的。这些 "开阔森林 "条件在国家公园管理局管理的土地上最为普遍,这与国家公园管理局的管理制度更忠实于历史条件的假设是一致的。因此,在控制了 "疏林 "之后,我们发现与美国国家林业局管理的土地存在正相关,这表明其他栖息地特征也很重要。我们的研究结果表明,橄榄面飞鹊繁殖栖息地的保护策略应优先考虑保护和形成有大树地区的开阔树冠,并确定其他重要的栖息地特征。预设火种、机械疏伐以及恢复本土森林管理方法都有助于恢复历史上的森林和火灾状况,这对该物种和其他具有类似栖息地要求的物种都是有益的。与实施严格的保护措施相比,对森林结构进行细微改变的速度更快、范围更广,这表明当物种在细微空间尺度上对栖息地做出反应时,可能会有多种保护途径。
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