Jing Liao, Taxing Zhang, Xingcheng He, Pei Zhang, Jianghong Ran
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Agriculture expansion and development have caused a biodiversity decline including birds. China has extensive agricultural lands and high farmland biodiversity; however, how agricultural landscapes and practices affect bird diversity in China is unclear. We estimated the spatial patterns of bird species richness (SR), functional diversity (FD), and the standardized effect size of the mean functional distance (SES.MFD) in China's agricultural region using the distribution data of 652 terrestrial bird species predicted by improved MaxEnt-modeling approaches, and assessed their relationships with landscape pattern and agricultural intensity in different temperature zones. Both bird SR and FD generally increased from northwest to South China, while the SES.MFD trend was the opposite. Bird SR and FD were positively related to woodland proportion, wetland proportion and landscape diversity. Yet impacts of agricultural intensity varied between temperature zones, showing negative effects on bird SR and FD in tropical, subtropical and warm temperate zones, but positive in middle temperature and plateau climate zones. With the increase in agricultural intensity, the community structure of birds clustered in tropical, subtropical and warm temperate zones, but dispersed in middle temperature zone. These results affirm natural landscape and landscape heterogeneity in maintaining terrestrial bird diversity in China's agroecosystems. Further, region-specific farmland biodiversity strategies are recommended, highlighting the management of cropland and agrochemical use in South China and taking advantage of the cropland value for bird conservation in relatively cold regions.
期刊介绍:
Biological Conservation is an international leading journal in the discipline of conservation biology. The journal publishes articles spanning a diverse range of fields that contribute to the biological, sociological, and economic dimensions of conservation and natural resource management. The primary aim of Biological Conservation is the publication of high-quality papers that advance the science and practice of conservation, or which demonstrate the application of conservation principles for natural resource management and policy. Therefore it will be of interest to a broad international readership.