4.7 Article

Bird abundance and diversity across a hardwood gradient within early seral plantation forest

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 261, Issue 8, Pages 1372-1381

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2011.01.018

Keywords

Bird diversity; Clearcut; Early seral forest; Ecological thresholds; Hardwood; Intensive forest management; Tree plantations

Categories

Funding

  1. Weyerhaeuser
  2. Starker Forests, Inc.
  3. Forest Capital
  4. Oregon Department of Forestry
  5. Thompson Timber Company
  6. Coast Range Conifers
  7. United States Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Food and Research Initiative [AFRI-2009-04457]
  8. National Council for Air and Stream Improvement
  9. Oregon State University College of Forestry Fish and Wildlife Habitat in Managed Forests

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The extensive removal of competing broadleaved shrubs in forest plantations typically results in structural and compositional simplification of early seral habitat. However, information on the tradeoffs between such intensive forestry practices and biodiversity is scant. Here we assess the magnitude and direction of potential impacts of intensive forest management on populations of early seral-associated breeding birds. Observed population declines of several Neotropical migrant bird species are hypothesized to be linked to the loss of early seral habitat on the breeding grounds. We investigated the association between broadleaved hardwood cover and avian abundance and diversity in intensively managed early seral Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) stands of the Pacific Northwest. Bird species richness decreased across an elevational gradient, but did not vary as a function of either local vegetation composition or structure. In contrast, bird abundance was strongly associated with hardwood cover at local and landscape scales, especially for foliage-gleaning species. We found strong support for the existence of a threshold in relative bird abundance as a function of hardwood at the stand scale; abundance doubled with an increase from 1% to similar to 6% hardwood and then reached a plateau. Though abundance of leaf-gleaners increased even more strongly across a gradient in hardwood cover, evidence for a distinct threshold was less clear. We conclude that when early seral hardwood forest is scarce, even small increases in hardwood may provide substantial conservation benefits. However, for some species (i.e., foliage gleaners), there may be more direct trade-offs in abundance and juvenile recruitment with hardwood management intensity. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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