4.3 Article

Human access and landscape structure effects on Andean forest bird richness

Journal

ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 396-402

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.actao.2010.03.009

Keywords

Akaike's Information Criterion; Cloud forest; Forest birds; Generalized linear models; Habitat fragmentation; Species richness

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [CGL2006-03000/BOS]
  2. Corantioquia
  3. Universidad Nacional de Colombia

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We analyzed the influence of human access and landscape structure on forest bird species richness in a fragmented landscape of the Colombian Andes In Latin America, habitat loss and fragmentation are considered as the greatest threats to biodiversity because a large number of countryside villagers complement their food and incomes with the extraction of forest resources. Anthropogenic actions may also affect forest species by bird hunting or indirectly through modifying the structure of forest habitats. We surveyed 14 secondary cloud forest remnants to generate bird species richness data for each of them We also quantified six landscape structure descriptors of forest patch size (patch area and core area), shape (perimeter of each fragment and the Patton's shape index) and isolation (nearest neighbor distance and edge contrast), and generated (using principal components analysis) a synthetic human influence variable based on the distance of each fragment to roads and villages, as well as the total slope of the fragments Species richness was related to these variables using generalized linear models (GLMs) complemented with model selection techniques based on information theory and partial regression analysis We found that forest patch size and accessibility were key drivers of bird richness, which increased toward largest patches, but decreased in those more accessible to humans and their potential disturbances. Both patch area and human access effects on forest bird species richness were complementary and similar in magnitude Our results provide a basis for biodiversity conservation plans and initiatives of Andean forest diversity (c) 2010 Elsevier Masson SAS All rights reserved.

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