| Literature DB >> 22493698 |
David B Lindenmayer1, Amanda R Northrop-Mackie, Rebecca Montague-Drake, Mason Crane, Damian Michael, Sachiko Okada, Philip Gibbons.
Abstract
The value for biodiversity of large intact areas of native vegetation is well established. The biodiversity value of regrowth vegetation is also increasingly recognised worldwide. However, there can be different kinds of revegetation that have different origins. Are there differences in the richness and composition of biotic communities in different kinds of revegetation? The answer remains unknown or poorly known in many ecosystems. We examined the conservation value of different kinds of revegetation through a comparative study of birds in 193 sites surveyed over ten years in four growth types located in semi-cleared agricultural areas of south-eastern Australia. These growth types were resprout regrowth, seedling regrowth, plantings, and old growth. Our investigation produced several key findings: (1) Marked differences in the bird assemblages of plantings, resprout regrowth, seedling regrowth, and old growth. (2) Differences in the number of species detected significantly more often in the different growth types; 29 species for plantings, 25 for seedling regrowth, 20 for resprout regrowth, and 15 for old growth. (3) Many bird species of conservation concern were significantly more often recorded in resprout regrowth, seedling regrowth or plantings but no species of conservation concern were recorded most often in old growth. We suggest that differences in bird occurrence among different growth types are likely to be strongly associated with growth-type differences in stand structural complexity.Our findings suggest a range of vegetation growth types are likely to be required in a given farmland area to support the diverse array of bird species that have the potential to occur in Australian temperate woodland ecosystems. Our results also highlight the inherent conservation value of regrowth woodland and suggest that current policies which allow it to be cleared or thinned need to be carefully re-examined.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22493698 PMCID: PMC3320884 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0034527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The South-west Slopes study region of southern New South Wales, south-eastern Australia.
Figure 2Average counts for growth types in a particular year and season.
Figure 3Biplot of the first two canonical axes showing species and growth types.
Distances between species approximate the chi-squared distance between species distributions (see [59] for details of the approach used in data analyses).
Figure 4Correspondence analysis biplots of bird species and growth type.
The diagrams are: (left) first versus third dimensions from correspondence analysis and (right) second and third dimensions from correspondence analysis. Distances between species approximate the chi-squared distance between species distributions (see [59] for details of the approach used in data analyses).
Figure 5Median values for vegetation characteristics in different growth types.