Abstract

As the amount of urbanization in the landscape surrounding a riparian zone increases, local riparian vegetation structure and composition change in complex ways. The impact of increasing urbanization on birds in and around riparian zones will depend on their differential sensitivity to local- versus landscape-scale habitat variation. Thus, our principal objective was to determine which spatial scale has a greater association with the distribution of each bird species using riparian corridors in a landscape mosaic comprised of anthropogenic land uses and undeveloped native shrublands in coastal southern California. We surveyed 137 points in riparian vegetation along an urbanization gradient, and used logistic regression and information theory to select best supported models describing the distribution of each of 52 bird species. Models based only on local-scale vegetation variables were best supported for 19 species, whereas landscape-scale (amount of urbanization within a 1000-m radius) models were best supported for 13. Ten species were best described by models combining local- and landscape-scale variables, and 10 had no well-supported models. Within guilds, woodland and riparian-dependent species appeared to respond to local vegetation variables whereas shrubland species appeared more sensitive to landscape context. Likewise, insectivores were more likely to be associated with variation in local-scale variables. In contrast to other studies, Neotropical migrants were not sensitive to increasing urbanization. Provided that local vegetation remains in good condition, our results suggest that riparian bird species may persist even in areas with extensive urbanization.

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