At the landscape level, birds respond strongly to habitat amount but weakly to fragmentation

被引:56
|
作者
De Camargo, Rafael X. [1 ]
Boucher-Lalonde, Veronique [1 ]
Currie, David J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ottawa, Dept Biol, Ottawa, ON, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
extinction threshold hypothesis; forest cover; habitat amount hypothesis; habitat fragmentation hypothesis; human-dominated land cover; probability of occurrence; richness; southern Ontario; SPECIES-RICHNESS; FOREST COVER; AREA; CONNECTIVITY;
D O I
10.1111/ddi.12706
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
AimIt is usually thought that habitat fragmentation acts negatively on species survival, and consequently, on biodiversity. Recent literature challenges whether habitat fragmentation per se affects species richness, beyond the effect of habitat area. Theoretical studies have suggested that fragmentation may matter most when the amount of available habitat is small or at intermediate levels. However, a recent review suggests that the effect of fragmentation on species richness is usually positive. Here, we dissect the richness-fragmentation relationship. What is the effect size? Does it depend upon the amount of habitat cover? How do individual species respond to fragmentation? MethodsApplying a macroecological approach, we empirically related avian richness and the probability of occurrence (p(occ)) of individual species to fragmentation (number of patches), after controlling for habitat amount in 991 landscapes, each 100-km(2), in southern Ontario, Canada. ResultsSpecies richness was strongly related to total habitat amount, but habitat fragmentation had no detectable additional effect. Individual species' p(occ) related strongly to habitat amount. For some species, p(occ) also related secondarily to habitat fragmentation within landscapes. Logistic models revealed that p(occ) related significantly negatively to fragmentation after controlling for habitat amount for only 13% of forest- and 18% of open-habitat species bird species. However, p(occ) related significantly positively to fragmentation for even greater proportions of species, including some red-listed species. Fragmentation effects were not stronger at low or intermediate levels of habitat amount within landscapes. ConclusionIn earlier studies, negative effects of isolation were observed at the patch level in experimental manipulations. However, at the landscape level, avian species richness in southern Ontario apparently responds primarily to habitat amount and negligibly to fragmentation. We argue that the evidence is inconsistent with the hypothesis that reducing habitat fragmentation per se would be an effective conservation strategy for birds at the landscape level.
引用
收藏
页码:629 / 639
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Landscape size affects the relative importance of habitat amount, habitat fragmentation, and matrix quality on forest birds
    Smith, Adam C.
    Fahrig, Lenore
    Francis, Charles M.
    ECOGRAPHY, 2011, 34 (01) : 103 - 113
  • [2] HABITAT FRAGMENTATION AND POPULATION EXTINCTION OF BIRDS
    SIMBERLOFF, D
    IBIS, 1995, 137 : S105 - S111
  • [3] Introduction: Habitat fragmentation and western birds
    George, TL
    Dobkin, DS
    EFFECTS OF HABITAT FRAGMENTATION ON BIRDS IN WESTERN LANDSCAPES: CONTRASTS WITH PARADIGMS FROM THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, 2002, (25): : 4 - 7
  • [4] Habitat amount modulates biodiversity responses to fragmentation
    Zhang, Helin
    Chase, Jonathan M.
    Liao, Jinbao
    NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2024, 8 (08): : 1437 - 1447
  • [5] Landscape-level thresholds of habitat cover for woodland-dependent birds
    Radford, JQ
    Bennett, AF
    Cheers, GJ
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2005, 124 (03) : 317 - 337
  • [6] Does habitat fragmentation affect landscape-level temperatures? A global analysis
    Mendes, Clarice B.
    Prevedello, Jayme A.
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2020, 35 (08) : 1743 - 1756
  • [7] Small mammals respond to extreme habitat fragmentation in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest according to the landscape continuum model
    Gabriela Paise
    Emerson M. Vieira
    Paulo Inácio Prado
    Mammal Research, 2020, 65 : 309 - 322
  • [8] Small mammals respond to extreme habitat fragmentation in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest according to the landscape continuum model
    Paise, Gabriela
    Vieira, Emerson Monteiro
    Prado, Paulo Inacio
    MAMMAL RESEARCH, 2020, 65 (02) : 309 - 322
  • [9] Does habitat fragmentation affect landscape-level temperatures? A global analysis
    Clarice B. Mendes
    Jayme A. Prevedello
    Landscape Ecology, 2020, 35 : 1743 - 1756
  • [10] Landscape modification and habitat fragmentation: a synthesis
    Fischer, Joern
    Lindenmayer, David B.
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2007, 16 (03): : 265 - 280