湿地面积与栖息地异质性对促进美国大草原Pothole地区湿地鸟类物种丰富度和丰度的相对重要性

IF 2.6 2区 生物学 Q1 ORNITHOLOGY Condor Pub Date : 2019-12-16 DOI:10.1093/condor/duz060
Lisa H. Elliott, L. Igl, Douglas H. Johnson
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引用次数: 18

摘要

最近的研究表明,栖息地面积和栖息地异质性之间存在权衡,适度的异质性支持最大的物种丰富度。对这种单峰关系的支持在不同的生境和分类群中有所不同。在美国草原坑穴区冰川形成湿地中,考虑栖息地面积,从局域和景观两个尺度研究了生境异质性与物种丰富度的关系。我们测试了湿地鸟类物种丰富度、类群丰富度和物种丰富度的区域-栖息地异质性权衡。然后,我们确定了个别物种的栖息地关系,以及湿地面积与栖息地异质性和其他湿地特征的相对重要性。生境面积是物种丰富度和丰度的主要驱动因素。丰富度和丰度的其他变化可以用生境异质性或其他湿地和景观特征来解释。总体而言,鸟类物种丰富度对栖息地异质性呈单模态响应,表明存在区域异质性权衡。群落丰富度和丰度指标与生境异质性呈单峰或线性关系。在局部和景观尺度上,生境异质性指数对某些物种和鸟类类群具有重要意义,但并非所有物种和鸟类类群都具有重要意义。大多数鸟类类群的个体丰度和物种丰富度在公有湿地高于私有湿地,在恢复湿地高于天然湿地,在永久湿地高于其他类型湿地。然而,我们发现所有被调查的湿地,无论其所有权、恢复状态和湿地类别,都支持湿地义务鸟类。因此,保护所有类型的湿地有助于物种保育。我们的研究结果支持了保护大型湿地是优先事项的传统观点,但也表明保持栖息地的异质性将增强生物多样性,并支持更高的个体物种种群。
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The relative importance of wetland area versus habitat heterogeneity for promoting species richness and abundance of wetland birds in the Prairie Pothole Region, USA
ABSTRACT Recent work has suggested that a tradeoff exists between habitat area and habitat heterogeneity, with a moderate amount of heterogeneity supporting greatest species richness. Support for this unimodal relationship has been mixed and has differed among habitats and taxa. We examined the relationship between habitat heterogeneity and species richness after accounting for habitat area in glacially formed wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region in the United States at both local and landscape scales. We tested for area–habitat heterogeneity tradeoffs in wetland bird species richness, the richness of groups of similar species, and in species' abundances. We then identified the habitat relationships for individual species and the relative importance of wetland area vs. habitat heterogeneity and other wetland characteristics. We found that habitat area was the primary driver of species richness and abundance. Additional variation in richness and abundance could be explained by habitat heterogeneity or other wetland and landscape characteristics. Overall avian species richness responded unimodally to habitat heterogeneity, suggesting an area–heterogeneity tradeoff. Group richness and abundance metrics showed either unimodal or linear relationships with habitat heterogeneity. Habitat heterogeneity indices at local and landscape scales were important for some, but not all, species and avian groups. Both abundance of individual species and species richness of most avian groups were higher on publicly owned wetlands than on privately owned wetlands, on restored wetlands than natural wetlands, and on permanent wetlands than on wetlands of other classes. However, we found that all wetlands examined, regardless of ownership, restoration status, and wetland class, supported wetland-obligate birds. Thus, protection of all wetland types contributes to species conservation. Our results support conventional wisdom that protection of large wetlands is a priority but also indicate that maintaining habitat heterogeneity will enhance biodiversity and support higher populations of individual species.
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来源期刊
Condor
Condor ORNITHOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
46
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Condor is the official publication of the Cooper Ornithological Society, a non-profit organization of over 2,000 professional and amateur ornithologists and one of the largest ornithological societies in the world. A quarterly international journal that publishes original research from all fields of avian biology, The Condor has been a highly respected forum in ornithology for more than 100 years. The journal is one of the top ranked ornithology publications. Types of paper published include feature articles (longer manuscripts) Short Communications (generally shorter papers or papers that deal with one primary finding), Commentaries (brief papers that comment on articles published previously in The Condor), and Book Reviews.
期刊最新文献
Thank you to the reviewers of the 2020 Condor, volume 122 Habitat ecology of Nearctic–Neotropical migratory landbirds on the nonbreeding grounds Conservation social science in Ornithological Applications Advancing scientific knowledge and conservation of birds through inclusion of conservation social sciences in the American Ornithological Society Mixed evidence for effects of stewardship on Least Tern reproductive success in coastal Mississippi
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