| Literature DB >> 20949083 |
Michael Schaub1, Nicolas Martinez, Aline Tagmann-Ioset, Nadja Weisshaupt, Melanie L Maurer, Thomas S Reichlin, Fitsum Abadi, Niklaus Zbinden, Lukas Jenni, Raphaël Arlettaz.
Abstract
Conceived to combat widescale biodiversity erosion in farmland, agri-environment schemes have largely failed to deliver their promises despite massive financial support. While several common species have shown to react positively to existing measures, rare species have continued to decline in most European countries. Of particular concern is the status of insectivorous farmland birds that forage on the ground. We modelled the foraging habitat preferences of four declining insectivorous bird species (hoopoe, wryneck, woodlark, common redstart) inhabiting fruit tree plantations, orchards and vineyards. All species preferred foraging in habitat mosaics consisting of patches of grass and bare ground, with an optimal, species-specific bare ground coverage of 30-70% at the foraging patch scale. In the study areas, birds thrived in intensively cultivated farmland where such ground vegetation mosaics existed. Not promoted by conventional agri-environment schemes until now, patches of bare ground should be implemented throughout grassland in order to prevent further decline of insectivorous farmland birds.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20949083 PMCID: PMC2950849 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Model selection results for the effect of the proportion of bare ground (b), its square (b2), the vegetation height (h) and its square (h2) on the foraging selection probability for the four bird species.
| Hoopoe | Wryneck | Woodlark | Common redstart | |||||||||
| Model | Deviance | pD | ΔDIC | Deviance | pD | ΔDIC | Deviance | pD | ΔDIC | Deviance | pD | ΔDIC |
| b+b2+h+h2 | 998.64 | 34.53 | 1.36 |
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| - | - | - |
| b+h+h2 | 1123.13 | 30.56 | 121.88 | 359.73 | 18.85 | 8.86 | 1056.36 | 26.96 | 115.24 | - | - | - |
| h+h2 | 1327.08 | 21.25 | 316.51 | 386.66 | 10.54 | 27.48 | 1268.55 | 21.17 | 321.64 | - | - | - |
| b+b2+h |
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| 357.78 | 16.97 | 5.04 | 951.48 | 26.69 | 10.09 | - | - | - |
| b+b2 | 1071.58 | 20.09 | 59.87 | 363.92 | 11.09 | 5.29 | 1052.83 | 18.74 | 103.50 |
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| b+h | 1145.17 | 26.89 | 140.26 | 363.16 | 15.87 | 9.31 | 1093.14 | 20.45 | 145.51 | - | - | - |
| b | 1231.21 | 13.99 | 213.39 | 369.74 | 9.24 | 9.26 | 1185.16 | 12.94 | 230.03 | 551.46 | 9.97 | 5.69 |
| h | 1356.06 | 13.53 | 337.78 | 391.20 | 8.54 | 30.03 | 1315.51 | 13.11 | 360.54 | - | - | - |
| intercept | 1451.73 | 2.21 | 422.13 | 398.49 | 2.16 | 30.93 | 1399.41 | 2.01 | 433.33 | 750.66 | 2.06 | 196.99 |
Given are the deviance, the model complexity (pD) and the difference of the deviance information criterion between the best and the current model (ΔDIC). The best models are bold printed. The goodness-of-fit tests of the best models were acceptable in all species (Bayesian P-values, hoopoe: 0.54, wryneck: 0.19, woodlark: 0.24, common redstart: 0.32).
Figure 1Marginal selection probability of foraging locations in relation to amount of bare ground and vegetation height for four farmland bird species.
Predictions are revealed from the best models (see the supporting information) and refer to hoopoes (black dots), wrynecks (blue triangles), woodlarks (red squares) and common redstarts (green diamonds). Note that selection probabilities below 0.5 indicate avoidance, selection probabilities above 0.5 indicate preference. Points are posterior means, vertical lines show the limits of the 80% credible intervals.