植被结构和蛾类数量的减少限制了欧洲夜莺对恢复栖息地的重新定居

Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Rethinking Ecology Pub Date : 2018-03-10 DOI:10.3897/RETHINKINGECOLOGY.3.29338
Nathalie Winiger, P. Korner, R. Arlettaz, A. Jacot
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引用次数: 7

摘要

在过去的几个世纪里,欧洲的林地生态系统经历了重大转变。土地利用的变化和天然林动态的丧失往往导致结构差、均匀和密集的林分。毫不奇怪,依赖异质林分结构的开放森林物种数量急剧下降。欧洲夜莺Caprimulguseuropaeus是一种夜行食虫鸟,在瑞士瓦莱州的主要据点也经历了这样的衰落。尽管自2001年以来,该物种有可能在新的地点定居,并采取了栖息地恢复措施,但恢复后的地点尚未发生再定居,这表明目前的栖息地恢复策略存在问题。为了完善管理建议,我们比较了夜莺栖息地结构和蛾子丰度,这是夜莺的主要食物来源,在仍然有人居住的地点和被遗弃但最近恢复的地点。被占用地的植被结构更不均匀,蛾类丰度也高于废弃地。更具体地说,被占领的地点有更大的光秃秃的覆盖范围,而被遗弃的地点则表现出更多的更新和中间灌木层。自然栖木的发生率在被占领地也较高。因此,被遗弃的地点的特点是猎物丰度较低,植被覆盖较密,这两者的结合可能导致捕食夜隼的猎物较少。恢复行动将受益于保持残枝和枯枝,并针对以矿物土壤为特征的非生产性生境,从而减缓再生和灌木再生。因此,为了将来成功地管理夜蛾的栖息地,似乎有必要在开放森林的下层和中层之间找到平衡,同时保持高蛾子数量。
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Vegetation structure and decreased moth abundance limit the recolonisation of restored habitat by the European Nightjar
Woodland ecosystems of Europe have undergone major transitions in the last centuries. Changes in land use and the loss of natural forest dynamics have often led to structurally poor, uniform and dense stands. Not surprisingly, open forest species relying on a heterogeneous stand structure have suffered dramatic population declines. The European Nightjar Caprimulguseuropaeus, a nocturnal insectivorous bird, has undergone such a decline in its main Swiss stronghold in Valais. Despite the species’ potential to colonize new sites and habitat restoration measures implemented since 2001, recolonisation of restored sites has not taken place, suggesting problems with the current habitat restoration strategy. In order to refine management recommendations, we compared habitat structure and moth abundance, a key Nightjar food source, at sites that are still occupied and at sites that had been abandoned but have recently been restored. Vegetation structure was more heterogeneous and moth abundance greater at occupied than at abandoned sites. More specifically, occupied sites harboured a greater coverage of bare ground, while abandoned sites exhibited a higher amount of regeneration and intermediate shrub layer. The occurrence of natural perches was also higher in occupied sites. Abandoned sites are thus characterised by lower prey abundance and denser vegetation cover, the combination of which is likely to lead to lower prey availability for hunting Nightjars. Restoration action would benefit from maintaining snags and dead branches and by targeting unproductive habitats characterised by mineral soils, thereby slowing down regeneration and shrub regrowth. For future successful management of Nightjar habitats, it seems thereby essential trying to find the balance between actions that allow opening the lower and mid-strata of the forest while sustaining high moth populations.
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Rethinking Ecology
Rethinking Ecology Environmental Science-Ecology
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