农田边缘作为农业湿地鸟类保护的替代生境

Pierre Mallet, Arnaud Bechet, Clelia Sirami, Francois Mesleard, Thomas Blanchon, Francois Calatayud, Thomas Dagonet, Elie Gaget, Carole Leray, Thomas Galewski
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摘要

自20世纪50年代和欧洲农业集约化开始以来,农业景观中的鸟类繁殖量大幅下降。鉴于农业用地的压力越来越大,有必要确定消耗很少的生产性土地的保护措施。我们检验了补偿假设,该假设认为农田边缘可能代表了农业湿地鸟类的替代栖息地。我们在卡马格(法国南部)的稻田景观中监测了86个农田的鸟类物种,这是一个对鸟类具有国际重要性的湿地。我们调查了在每个农田中心周围500米缓冲区内的三种类型的农田边缘(芦苇带、草带和树篱)的面积是否对基于其主要栖息地(芦苇床、草地和森林边缘物种)定义的三种鸟类物种的丰度产生影响。我们控制了每种半自然栖息地(湿地、草地和林地)的面积、作物多样性(水稻、小麦、苜蓿、油菜和市场园艺)和平均农田面积。结果部分支持补偿假说,即对原始生境和替代生境面积的物种依赖响应。在芦苇床和草地鸟类群落中,一些物种受其原始栖息地面积和野外边缘面积的影响,符合补偿假说。欧亚芦苇莺在湿地和芦苇带地区都很受欢迎。玉米狩猎是草地和草带地区的最爱。我们无法证实其他物种的补偿假说。然而,这可能是由于这些物种中的大多数对它们的原始栖息地没有反应。因此,这些结果表明,野外边缘可能是某些物种的替代栖息地,但在物种与其主要栖息地密切相关的情况下,需要进一步的研究来证实这一假设的普遍性。我们的研究结果还表明,物种对增加田野边缘类型面积的反应可能在行会之间甚至行会内部有所不同。因此,可能很难在给定的景观中保护所有物种,管理行动可能需要根据当地与最高保护优先级相关的物种进行调整。为了应对这一挑战,可能需要在不同的空间尺度上设计景观管理措施。
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Field margins as substitute habitat for the conservation of birds in agricultural wetlands
Breeding birds in agricultural landscapes have declined considerably since the 1950s and the beginning of agricultural intensification in Europe. Given the increasing pressure on agricultural land, it is necessary to identify conservation measures that consume little productive land. We tested the compensation hypothesis which states that field margins may represent substitute habitats for bird species in agricultural wetlands. We monitored bird species in 86 crop fields in rice paddy landscapes of Camargue (southern France), a wetland of international importance for birds. We investigated whether the area of three types of field margins (reed strips, grass strips and hedgerows) within a 500 meter buffer around the centroid of each crop fields had an effect on the abundance of bird species from three groups defined based on their primary habitat (reedbeds, grasslands, and forest edge species). We controlled for the area of each type of semi-natural habitat (wetlands, grasslands, and woodlands), crop diversity (rice, wheat, alfalfa, rape, and market gardening) and mean crop field size. Results show partial support of the compensation hypothesis with species-dependent responses to primary and substitute habitat area. Some species within the reedbed and grassland bird guilds are favored by the area of their primary habitat as well as by the area of field margins, in line with the compensation hypothesis. Eurasian reed warbler is favored by the area of both wetlands and reed strips. Corn bunting is favored by grassland and grass strip areas. We could not confirm the compensation hypothesis for other species. However, this may be due to the fact that most of these species did not respond to their primary habitat. These results therefore suggest that field margins may represent substitute habitats for some species but further studies, in contexts where species are strongly associated with their primary habitat, would be needed to confirm the generality of this hypothesis. Our results also suggest that species response to increasing the area of a field margin type may vary among guilds and even within guilds. Therefore, it may be difficult to favor all species within a given landscape and management actions may need to be tailored to whichever species are locally associated with the highest conservation priority. To tackle this challenge, it may be necessary to design landscape management actions at different spatial scales.
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