Abstract

Structural complexity has long been recognized as important for maintaining songbird diversity. In recognition of the simplified condition of many managed forests, forest scientists have initiated efforts aimed at increasing the structural and compositional complexity of forest stands. Songbird community assemblage following timber harvest has been studied to assess these enhancement efforts, though current literature is largely limited to short-term responses and may not reflect longer-term patterns in response. Through a designed, replicated (n = 4) experiment located in northern Minnesota, we evaluated bird community response to differences in forest structure created through retention harvesting over a ten-year period. Treatments include three overstory manipulations (dispersed retention; aggregated retention with small harvest gaps; aggregated retention with large harvest gaps), one understory manipulation (mechanical brush removal), and controls (unharvested overstory; and/or unbrushed understory). Treatments were designed to alter forest structural complexity compared to controls and to restore more open understory conditions that resulted from now-suppressed surface fires. I hypothesized that songbird response would be different in treatment stands than in unharvested controls as a result of increased structural heterogeneity in harvested areas. Surveys were conducted in 2003, each odd year thereafter through 2011, and in 2012. Over this period avian community abundance and

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