Abstract

Intensification of agricultural practices has drastically shaped farmland landscapes and generally caused a decline in spatial and temporal heterogeneity, thus leading to changes in habitat quality and food resources and a decline for most farmland birds Europe-wide. The relationship between complex landscape changes and habitat preferences of animals still remains poorly understood. Particularly, temporal and spatial changes in diversity may affect not only habitat choice but also population sizes. To answer that question, we have looked into a severely declining typical farmland bird species, the grey partridge Perdix perdix in a diverse farmland landscape near Vienna to investigate the specific habitat preferences in respect to the change of agricultural landscape over two decades and geographic scales. Using a dataset collected over 7.64 km² and between 2001 and 2017 around Vienna, we calculated Chesson’s electivity index to study the partridge’s change of habitat selection over time on two scales and between winter and spring in 2017. Although the farmland landscape underwent an ongoing diversification over the two decades, the grey partridges declined in numbers and shifted habitat use to less diverse habitats. During covey period in winter, partridges preferred also human infrastructure reservoirs such as roads and used more diverse areas with smaller fields than during breeding where they selected harvested fields but surprisingly, avoided hedges, fallow land and greening. Known as best partridge habitats, those structures when inappropriately managed might rather function as predator reservoirs. The avoidance behaviour may further be a consequence of increasing landscape structuring and edge effects by civilisation constructions. Besides, the loss in size and quality of partridge farmland is altered by crop choice and pesticides reducing plant and insect food. With declining breeding pairs, the grey partridge does not seem to adjust to these unsustainable landscape changes and farmland practices.

Highlights

  • Evidence has been numerous that since the 1950s farmland biodiversity decreases worldwide due to on-going changes in agricultural practices [1,2,3]

  • Time of year and day, disturbances, wind–and other weather conditions all affect the behaviour of Habitat preferences of grey partridge in dynamic landscapes partridges, the field worker needed to adapt to this variation

  • The number of squares occupied by partridges remained the same over the years (X2 = 0.151; p = 0.927; Fig 1A) but estimation of the numbers of individuals and territories revealed a visible decline over the years

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Summary

Objectives

The goal of this study was to investigate between-year and within-year trends in grey partridge habitat preferences in a peri-urban farmland landscape

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
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