Abstract

Published accounts of the conservation of biodiversity indicate that understanding patterns of species distribution and richness is crucial. However, what drives patterns of species composition in a landscape remains debatable. I examined the relationship between limnological characteristics of reservoirs, morpho-edaphic variables, biological variables, and patterns of bird species richness and distribution. Six limnological, three morpho-edaphic variables, and biological variables were recorded for 35 reservoirs and analyzed by multivariate statistical techniques. To investigate the most important explanatory factors influencing avian species richness and their distribution, redundancy analysis (RDA) was used. A total of 85 bird species from 54 genera, with a mean species richness 14.23 ± 6.72 (mean ± standard deviation) per reservoir, were recorded. The RDA analysis identified two significant RDA axes, and 34.4% of the variation in species richness is explained by environmental variation (R2adj = 0.34375; P < 0.001). Bird species richness was positively correlated with the surface area of reservoirs. I showed here that reservoir size and environmental heterogeneity were the important features that affect bird species richness, thus providing an important insight into the ecological relationship between waterbird species richness and the limnological characteristics of reservoirs. The strong positive correlation between species richness and both size and environmental variables underscores the importance of these reservoir features in the management of wildlife conservation. Large, environmentally heterogeneous reservoirs can support more species than small, environmentally homogeneous reservoirs because large, environmentally heterogeneous limnetic ecosystems can provide different resources for nesting, foraging, and roosting habitats for a diversified bird species. The result here also plays a role towards strengthening our knowledge of aquatic bird ecology and the natural history of African-Eurasian Migratory waterbirds.

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