Abstract

ContextIn agricultural landscapes, small woodland patches can be important wildlife refuges. Their value in maintaining biodiversity may, however, be compromised by isolation, and so knowledge about the role of habitat structure is vital to understand the drivers of diversity. This study examined how avian diversity and abundance were related to habitat structure in four small woods in an agricultural landscape in eastern England.ObjectivesThe aims were to examine the edge effect on bird diversity and abundance, and the contributory role of vegetation structure. Specifically: what is the role of vegetation structure on edge effects, and which edge structures support the greatest bird diversity?MethodsAnnual breeding bird census data for 28 species were combined with airborne lidar data in linear mixed models fitted separately at (i) the whole wood level, and (ii) for the woodland edges only.ResultsDespite relatively small woodland areas (4.9–9.4 ha), bird diversity increased significantly towards the edges, being driven in part by vegetation structure. At the whole woods level, diversity was positively associated with increased vegetation above 0.5 m and especially with increasing vegetation density in the understorey layer, which was more abundant at the woodland edges. Diversity along the edges was largely driven by the density of vegetation below 4 m.ConclusionsThe results demonstrate that bird diversity was maximised by a diverse vegetation structure across the wood and especially a dense understorey along the edge. These findings can assist bird conservation by guiding habitat management of remaining woodland patches.

Highlights

  • Habitat fragmentation has been shown to have negative impacts on species diversity across ecosystems (Donald et al 2001; Mahood et al 2012)

  • : what is the role of vegetation structure on edge effects, and which edge structures support the greatest bird diversity? Methods Annual breeding bird census data for 28 species were combined with airborne lidar data in linear mixed models fitted separately at (i) the whole wood level, and (ii) for the woodland edges only

  • This study examined the drivers of bird species diversity and abundance in relation to vegetation structure across four woods and, at their

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Habitat fragmentation has been shown to have negative impacts on species diversity across ecosystems (Donald et al 2001; Mahood et al 2012). The presence of connecting landscape features such as hedgerows and tree lines can offer additional habitat, cover and Landscape Ecol (2018) 33:895–910 dispersal corridors for a range of species (Hinsley et al 1995; Fuller et al 2001). Due to these reasons, and strongly influenced by vegetation structure (Fuller 1995; Batary et al 2014), higher densities of some bird species may be recorded at forest edges (Schlossberg and King 2008; Knight et al 2016)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call