Bird Fauna Composition in a Protected Area in Southern Brazil
The integrity of natural landscapes is affected by human actions, mainly by the intensification and expansion of agriculture. Factors such as fragment size and the structure of the environment can determine changes in the structure and composition of bird assemblages. In this study we evaluated the...
Saved in:
Published in: | Zoological Studies Vol. 62; pp. 1 - 11 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
China (Republic : 1949- )
中央研究院生物多樣性研究中心
2023
Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Abstract | The integrity of natural landscapes is affected by human actions, mainly by the intensification and expansion of agriculture. Factors such as fragment size and the structure of the environment can determine changes in the structure and composition of bird assemblages. In this study we evaluated the bird species composition in three structurally different forest environments, defined as the Core areas, Edge areas, and Buffer areas. The surveys were performed in the Natural Park of Sertão (NPS) and its surroundings in the southern limit of the Atlantic Forest, southern Brazil. To record species composition of birds, the point count method was used. The bird species were categorized according to feeding habits, habitat use, and sensitivity to forest fragmentation. A total of 131 species of birds distributed in 18 orders and 38 families were recorded. The species composition varied between the three areas and there was a significant difference in diversity between the Core and Edge areas and the Core and Buffer areas. Omnivorous species were found more in the Buffer areas than in the Core areas. Species that use the Broad habitat were more frequent in the Buffer and Edge areas than in the Core areas. Species that use the Forest habitat were found more in the Core areas than in the Buffer areas. Most recorded species (66%) have low sensitivity to forest fragmentation. The assemblage patterns found in this study, notably the differences among the three areas in diversity and species composition, can be explained by the ecological traits and the sensitivity levels of birds to forest fragmentation, which in turn seem to reflect different forest structures in the NPS and its surroundings. Although the Edge and Buffer areas have greater diversity, the Core areas showed great importance in maintaining species that are more sensitive to forest fragmentation. Even the largest fragments (such as the NPS), considering the regional context, may have bird species that are widely distributed and less sensitive to forest fragmentation. Forested habitat species may no longer occur or be restricted to the core area of the fragments. For conservation of bird fauna in the NPS, the maintenance of the core areas is essential, especially for those species that require a structurally preserved environment. |
---|---|
AbstractList | The integrity of natural landscapes is affected by human actions, mainly by the intensification and expansion of agriculture. Factors such as fragment size and the structure of the environment can determine changes in the structure and composition of bird assemblages. In this study we evaluated the bird species composition in three structurally different forest environments, defined as the Core areas, Edge areas, and Buffer areas. The surveys were performed in the Natural Park of Sertão (NPS) and its surroundings in the southern limit of the Atlantic Forest, southern Brazil. To record species composition of birds, the point count method was used. The bird species were categorized according to feeding habits, habitat use, and sensitivity to forest fragmentation. A total of 131 species of birds distributed in 18 orders and 38 families were recorded. The species composition varied between the three areas and there was a significant difference in diversity between the Core and Edge areas and the Core and Buffer areas. Omnivorous species were found more in the Buffer areas than in the Core areas. Species that use the Broad habitat were more frequent in the Buffer and Edge areas than in the Core areas. Species that use the Forest habitat were found more in the Core areas than in the Buffer areas. Most recorded species (66%) have low sensitivity to forest fragmentation. The assemblage patterns found in this study, notably the differences among the three areas in diversity and species composition, can be explained by the ecological traits and the sensitivity levels of birds to forest fragmentation, which in turn seem to reflect different forest structures in the NPS and its surroundings. Although the Edge and Buffer areas have greater diversity, the Core areas showed great importance in maintaining species that are more sensitive to forest fragmentation. Even the largest fragments (such as the NPS), considering the regional context, may have bird species that are widely distributed and less sensitive to forest fragmentation. Forested habitat species may no longer occur or be restricted to the core area of the fragments. For conservation of bird fauna in the NPS, the maintenance of the core areas is essential, especially for those species that require a structurally preserved environment. The integrity of natural landscapes is affected by human actions, mainly by the intensification and expansion of agriculture. Factors such as fragment size and the structure of the environment can determine changes in the structure and composition of bird assemblages. In this study we evaluated the bird species composition in three structurally different forest environments, defined as the Core areas, Edge areas, and Buffer areas. The surveys were performed in the Natural Park of Sertão (NPS) and its surroundings in the southern limit of the Atlantic Forest, southern Brazil. To record species composition of birds, the point count method was used. The bird species were categorized according to feeding habits, habitat use, and sensitivity to forest fragmentation. A total of 131 species of birds distributed in 18 orders and 38 families were recorded. The species composition varied between the three areas and there was a significant difference in diversity between the Core and Edge areas and the Core and Buffer areas. Omnivorous species were found more in the Buffer areas than in the Core areas. Species that use the Broad habitat were more frequent in the Buffer and Edge areas than in the Core areas. Species that use the Forest habitat were found more in the Core areas than in the Buffer areas. Most recorded species (66%) have low sensitivity to forest fragmentation. The assemblage patterns found in this study, notably the differences among the three areas in diversity and species composition, can be explained by the ecological traits and the sensitivity levels of birds to forest fragmentation, which in turn seem to reflect different forest structures in the NPS and its surroundings. Although the Edge and Buffer areas have greater diversity, the Core areas showed great importance in maintaining species that are more sensitive to forest fragmentation. Even the largest fragments (such as the NPS), considering the regional context, may have bird species that are widely distributed and less sensitive to forest fragmentation. Forested habitat species may no longer occur or be restricted to the core area of the fragments. For conservation of bird fauna in the NPS, the maintenance of the core areas is essential, especially for those species that require a structurally preserved environment. |
Author | Paulo Afonso Hartmann Marilia T. Hartmann Camila F.M.F. Betiol |
AuthorAffiliation | 1 Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, Federal University of Fronteira Sul, Erechim, 99700-970, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. E-mail: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com (Hartmann); mendescamilaf@gmail.com (Betiol); marilia.hartmann@gmail.com (MT Hartmann) |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: 1 Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, Federal University of Fronteira Sul, Erechim, 99700-970, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. E-mail: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com (Hartmann); mendescamilaf@gmail.com (Betiol); marilia.hartmann@gmail.com (MT Hartmann) |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Camila F M F surname: Betiol fullname: Betiol, Camila F M F email: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com, mendescamilaf@gmail.com, marilia.hartmann@gmail.com organization: Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, Federal University of Fronteira Sul, Erechim, 99700-970, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. E-mail: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com (Hartmann); mendescamilaf@gmail.com (Betiol); marilia.hartmann@gmail.com (MT Hartmann) – sequence: 2 givenname: Marilia T surname: Hartmann fullname: Hartmann, Marilia T email: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com, mendescamilaf@gmail.com, marilia.hartmann@gmail.com organization: Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, Federal University of Fronteira Sul, Erechim, 99700-970, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. E-mail: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com (Hartmann); mendescamilaf@gmail.com (Betiol); marilia.hartmann@gmail.com (MT Hartmann) – sequence: 3 givenname: Paulo Afonso surname: Hartmann fullname: Hartmann, Paulo Afonso email: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com, mendescamilaf@gmail.com, marilia.hartmann@gmail.com organization: Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, Federal University of Fronteira Sul, Erechim, 99700-970, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. E-mail: hartmann.paulo@gmail.com (Hartmann); mendescamilaf@gmail.com (Betiol); marilia.hartmann@gmail.com (MT Hartmann) |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38628159$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNpVUU1Lw0AQXaSiVj16lRy9pM5-JjmItMUvEBWqIF6WTTLRlXS3bhJBf70JVdHLzPDm8R7zZkxGzjsk5IDCRCkGx0-LCQPGJ4rFUm6QHZpSiCVjj6N-BkZ7FNQ2GTfNK4DgPBNbZJuniqVUZjvkZGZDGZ2bzplo7pcr39jWehdZF5noLvgWixbLaBrQDNjCd-0LBhfNgvm09R7ZrEzd4P533yUP52f388v4-vbiaj69jg2ntI1TVMByQJmDQMRC5qaCPEtEpaRismSCQlaljGKmEigrk6UpZUDzEnmRi4TvktO17qrLl1gW6Npgar0KdmnCh_bG6v8bZ1_0s3_XlALNuFK9wtG3QvBvHTatXtqmwLo2Dn3XaA4COOOJHMwO_5r9uvyE1hP4mmBs6NPSr74Lrj9fD3kPceub_iUCKEgASHVfpOBfu-p-Gw |
ContentType | Journal Article |
DBID | 188 NPM 7X8 5PM |
DOI | 10.6620/ZS.2023.62-55 |
DatabaseName | Airiti Library PubMed MEDLINE - Academic PubMed Central (Full Participant titles) |
DatabaseTitle | PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitleList | PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Zoology |
EISSN | 1810-522X |
EndPage | 11 |
ExternalDocumentID | 38628159 10215506_N202401050008_00054 |
Genre | Journal Article |
GroupedDBID | -A0 -~X 123 188 2UF 2WC 4.4 AAKKN ABEEZ ACGFS ADINQ AENEX AFGXO AHBYD AHYZX AINHJ ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AMKLP ATFKH C6C CCPVR CNMHZ FRP M~E OK1 RPM SOJ TR2 TUXDW UZ3 53G 8RM AAYZJ ACACY ACULB AHBXF AHSBF ASPBG AVWKF C24 EBS ECGQY EJD NPM RSV 7X8 5PM |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-a311t-8e602b0e5b04eeec5baf0b974f65625d24109f821e9670dfa9881201bde3cb473 |
IEDL.DBID | RPM |
ISSN | 1021-5506 |
IngestDate | Tue Sep 17 21:28:30 EDT 2024 Sat Oct 26 05:33:39 EDT 2024 Sat Nov 02 12:14:48 EDT 2024 Tue Oct 01 22:50:41 EDT 2024 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Keywords | Forest fragmentation Community ecology Bird conservation Agricultural matrix Edge effect |
Language | English |
LinkModel | DirectLink |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-a311t-8e602b0e5b04eeec5baf0b974f65625d24109f821e9670dfa9881201bde3cb473 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
PMID | 38628159 |
PQID | 3040323757 |
PQPubID | 23479 |
PageCount | 11 |
ParticipantIDs | pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_11019366 proquest_miscellaneous_3040323757 pubmed_primary_38628159 airiti_journals_10215506_N202401050008_00054 |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2023-00-00 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2023-01-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – year: 2023 text: 2023-00-00 |
PublicationDecade | 2020 |
PublicationPlace | China (Republic : 1949- ) |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: China (Republic : 1949- ) |
PublicationTitle | Zoological Studies |
PublicationTitleAlternate | Zool Stud |
PublicationTitle_FL | 動物研究學刊 |
PublicationYear | 2023 |
Publisher | 中央研究院生物多樣性研究中心 Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica |
Publisher_xml | – name: 中央研究院生物多樣性研究中心 – name: Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica |
SSID | ssj0043394 |
Score | 2.3365738 |
Snippet | The integrity of natural landscapes is affected by human actions, mainly by the intensification and expansion of agriculture. Factors such as fragment size and... The integrity of natural landscapes is affected by human actions, mainly by the intensification and expansion of agriculture. Factors such as fragment size and... |
SourceID | pubmedcentral proquest pubmed airiti |
SourceType | Open Access Repository Aggregation Database Index Database Publisher |
StartPage | 1 |
Title | Bird Fauna Composition in a Protected Area in Southern Brazil |
URI | https://www.airitilibrary.com/Article/Detail/10215506-N202401050008-00054 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38628159 https://search.proquest.com/docview/3040323757 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC11019366 |
Volume | 62 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1NS8NAEB1sUfAiflu_iODRtJvsZrM5eLC1xYsiqCC9hE12ggHdSmsv_npnk0asePKaZCE8JjvvTWbfAJyrIhYRD42fBwn6goSyrwoUvhIYhFoaHaEruN08xHfP6nrobHJkcxamatrPs7JrX9-6tnypeivf3_Je0yfWu78dUMoi3iFlrwUtIoeNRq_3X8F5Nf7Qzaz2iX_L2llTypD1xg9dNy68K0mAUTZZ1aVzDvqLXP7ukfyRdEabsLFgi95V_VZbsIJ2G9bGk6oWvgOX_XJqvJGeW-25D3vRgOWV1tPefe3AgIaWo3bXqnF5OLVef6o_y9ddeBoNHwc3_mIegq95EHz4CiULM4ZRxgQi5lGmC5aRICikkzGGkjFLChUGmMiYmUInitI3CzKDPM9EzPegbScWD8DTwmhNQjRCRYSJxyrXSogEZZxxVhSyAxc1NukipGepw9PBmd6FzheNeBmrJlg60teBswbBlMLT_XPQFifzWcppk-Ahj6O4A_s1oul77aORclJTiuhUB9QS1t8POOvr5TsUEZUFdhMBh_9fegTrLhbqcsoxtD-mczyB1szMT6t4-gK8xs1H |
link.rule.ids | 230,315,729,782,786,887,4028,27932,27933,27934,53800,53802 |
linkProvider | National Library of Medicine |
linkToHtml | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1NT-MwEB1BAS0XvlnK8hEkjqR1YsdxDntYClURUCEBEuISOfFERAIXtfSyv37HSYMA7YlrHEuRZzzznjN-A3CsilhEPDR-HiToCyLKvipQ-EpgEGppdITuwG1wGw8f1Nm5k8mRzV2Yqmg_z8qOfX7p2PKpqq18fcm7TZ1Y9-a6RymLcIeU3XlYoA3LWMPS6wgsOK8aILqu1T4hcFlra0oZsu7jbcc1DO9IomCUTxZ16bSD_gcvv1ZJfkg7_dXvfvAarMyApvenHl-HObQbsPQ4qo7RN-H3aTk2Xl9PrfZcTJjVbnml9bR3U4s3oKHpqN2zqtMejq13OtZ_y-ctuO-f3_UG_qyVgq95ELz5CiULM4ZRxgQi5lGmC5YRlyikY0CG8jhLChUGmMiYmUInijI_CzKDPM9EzLehZUcWd8DTwmhNHDZCRViLxyrXSogEZZxxVhSyDSf1oqaz3TBJnSGcHdJh6CTVCNKxqvmlw4ttOGqWPiXPdr8rtMXRdJJyii885HEUt-FnbYr0tZbgSDkRMUVIrA3qk5HeX3Cq2Z9HyDaVenZji93vTz2EH4O766v06mJ4-QuWnUPVpzJ70HobT3Ef5idmelA55T87c-L7 |
linkToPdf | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1NT9wwEB0VClUvUD4KC7RNJY7Nxokdx0HiUD5WVNDVSrRSxSVy4rGItHhXu-ylv55xsqlK1VN7TWwp8oxn3nPGbwCOlc1EyhMTVnGOoSCiHCqLIlQC40RLo1P0B25Xt9nwh7q49DI5J91dmKZovyrrvhs_9F1939RWTh-qqKsTi0ZfzyllEe6QMpoaG63AS9q0LOmYehuFBedNE0TfuTokFC5bfU0pExbd3fZ90_C-JBpGOWVN114_6G8Q889Kyd9Sz2Dzfz76DWwsAWfwuR2zBS_QbcP63aQ5Tt-B07N6ZoKBXjgd-NiwrOEKahfoYNSKOKCh6aj9s6bjHs5ccDbTP-vxLnwfXH47vwqXLRVCzeP4MVQoWVIyTEsmELFKS21ZSZzCSs-EDOVzlluVxJjLjBmrc0UIgMWlQV6VIuNvYdVNHO5DoIXRmrhsioowF89UpZUQOcqs5Mxa2YNP7cIWy10xL7wxvC2KYeKl1QjasaYJpseNPfjYLX9BHu5_W2iHk8W84BRneMKzNOvBXmuOYtpKcRScCJkiRNYD9cxQvwZ49eznb8g-jYp2Z4-Df5_6AV6NLgbFzZfh9SG89j7VHs4cwerjbIHvYGVuFu8bv3wClDLlew |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Bird+Fauna+Composition+in+a+Protected+Area+in+Southern+Brazil&rft.jtitle=Zoological+studies&rft.au=Betiol%2C+Camila+F+M+F&rft.au=Hartmann%2C+Marilia+T&rft.au=Hartmann%2C+Paulo+Afonso&rft.date=2023&rft.eissn=1810-522X&rft.volume=62&rft.spage=e55&rft.epage=e55&rft_id=info:doi/10.6620%2FZS.2023.62-55&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT |
thumbnail_m | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/image/custom?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.airitilibrary.com%2Fjnltitledo%2F10215506-c.jpg |