| Literature DB >> 26962857 |
Gráinne P Cleary1,2, Holly Parsons3, Adrian Davis4, Bill R Coleman5, Darryl N Jones6, Kelly K Miller2, Michael A Weston2.
Abstract
Private gardens provide habitat and resources for many birds living in human-dominated landscapes. While wild bird feeding is recognised as one of the most popular forms of human-wildlife interaction, almost nothing is known about the use of bird baths. This citizen science initiative explores avian assemblages at bird baths in private gardens in south-eastern Australia and how this differs with respect to levels of urbanisation and bioregion. Overall, 992 citizen scientists collected data over two, four-week survey periods during winter 2014 and summer 2015 (43% participated in both years). Avian assemblages at urban and rural bird baths differed between bioregions with aggressive nectar-eating species influenced the avian assemblages visiting urban bird baths in South Eastern Queensland, NSW North Coast and Sydney Basin while introduced birds contributed to differences in South Western Slopes, Southern Volcanic Plains and Victorian Midlands. Small honeyeaters and other small native birds occurred less often at urban bird baths compared to rural bird baths. Our results suggest that differences between urban versus rural areas, as well as bioregion, significantly influence the composition of avian assemblages visiting bird baths in private gardens. We also demonstrate that citizen science monitoring of fixed survey sites such as bird baths is a useful tool in understanding large-scale patterns in avian assemblages which requires a vast amount of data to be collected across broad areas.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26962857 PMCID: PMC4786105 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Two PERMANOVAs (one per survey period) of bird assemblages at bird baths between bioregions and urban versus rural areas.
| Season | Source | Type | DF | Pseudo F | P (perms.) | Unique Perms. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bioregion | Random | 8 | 4.8879 | 0.001* | 999 | |
| Urbanisation | Fixed | 1 | 5.235 | 0.006* | 998 | |
| Bioregion | Random | 12 | 5.2373 | 0.001* | 995 | |
| Urbanisation | Fixed | 1 | 9.6009 | 0.001* | 998 |
Statistically significant results are indicated by *.
Fig 1Map depicting the bioregions referred to in Table 2.
PERMANOVA pair-wise comparisons of bird assemblages at bird baths in urban areas and rural areas for individual bioregions.
Different PERMANOVA pair-wise comparisons between urban and rural assemblages were conducted for winter and summer. ‘-‘ indicates < 3 participants in urban and/or rural categories within a bioregion, thus precluding analysis.
| Bioregion | Winter T Statistic | Summer T Statistic |
|---|---|---|
| Brigalow Belt South (BBS) | 1.1744 | 1.3648* |
| Eyre Yorke Block (EYB) | - | 0.9691 |
| Flinders Lofty Block (FLB) | - | 1.6599* |
| Jarrah Forest (JAF) | - | 1.0895 |
| NSW North Coast (NNC) | 1.7962* | 1.5389* |
| NSW South Western Slopes (NSS) | 1.2548 | 1.4285* |
| South East Coastal Plain (SCP) | 1.2494 | 1.9405* |
| South East Corner (SEC) | 1.1037 | 1.0332 |
| South Eastern Highlands (SEH) | 1.2870 | 2.1076* |
| South Eastern Queensland (SEQ) | 1.9755* | 1.7544* |
| Southern Volcanic Plains (SVP) | - | 1.9985* |
| Sydney Basin (SYB) | 4.0132* | 3.2107* |
| Victorian Midlands (VIM) | 1.2402 | 1.8211* |
Statistically significant results are indicated by *.
Fig 2The number of bird baths monitored in urban (U, black bars) and rural (R, grey bars) (U = n/R = n) areas and mean bird species richness (± SE) for each bioregion in the winter survey (SYB, NNC, SEQ) and summer survey (BBS, SEQ, NNC, SYB, NSS, SEH, SCP, SVP, VIM, FLB).
The significance of a comparison of species richness per bird bath between urban and rural baths is presented (Mann-Whitney U test, statistically significant results are indicated by *). Bioregions are abbreviated, see Table 2 and Fig 1 for full names).
SIMPER (similarity percentages) analysis of bird species that contributed ≥ 4.5% to the Bray-Curtis indices of dissimilarity between avian assemblages at urban and rural bird baths during the winter survey.
Proportion occurrence represents the proportion of bird baths at which a given species was recorded.
| Bioregion (Average dissimilarity) | Species | Proportion Occurrence Urban | Proportion Occurrence Rural | Contrib. % | Cumul. % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Noisy Miner | 0.47 | 0.39 | 5.11 | 5.11 | |
| Lewin’s Honeyeater | 0.24 | 0.53 | 4.84 | 9.96 | |
| Rainbow Lorikeet | 0.42 | 0.31 | 4.69 | 14.65 | |
| Lewin’s Honeyeater | 0.21 | 0.59 | 5.06 | 5.06 | |
| Rainbow Lorikeet | 0.53 | 0.22 | 4.86 | 9.92 | |
| Eastern Spinebill | 0.10 | 0.50 | 4.14 | 4.14 |
*Highest contribution percentage.
SIMPER analysis of bird species that contributed ≥ 4.5% or more to the Bray-Curtis indices of dissimilarity between bird assemblages at urban and rural bird baths during the summer survey.
Proportion occurrence represents the proportion of bird baths at which a given species was recorded.
| Bioregion (Average dissimilarity) | Species | Proportion Occurrence Urban | Proportion Occurrence Rural | Contrib. % | Cumul. % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Double-barred Finch | 0.17 | 0.86 | 5.87 | 5.87 | |
| Noisy Miner | 0.51 | 0.32 | 7.19 | 7.19 | |
| Lewin’s Honeyeater | 0.13 | 0.49 | 6.35 | 13.54 | |
| Satin Bowerbird | 0.35 | 0.37 | 5.22 | 5.22 | |
| Noisy Miner | 0.46 | 0.16 | 4.66 | 9.88 | |
| Red-browed Finch | 0.06 | 0.57 | 4.84 | 4.84 | |
| Noisy Miner | 0.48 | 0.22 | 4.84 | 9.68 | |
| 0.63 | 0.13 | 5.12 | 5.12 | ||
| Superb Fairy-wren | 0.25 | 0.69 | 4.88 | 10.01 | |
| Australian Magpie | 0.25 | 0.56 | 4.63 | 14.64 | |
| Grey Fantail | 0.14 | 0.62 | 4.95 | 4.95 | |
| Red Wattlebird | 0.57 | 0.19 | 4.94 | 9.88 | |
| Crimson Rosella | 0.41 | 0.5 | 4.74 | 14.63 | |
| Superb Fairy-wren | 0.22 | 0.54 | 4.63 | 19.26 | |
| Superb Fairy-wren | 0.06 | 0.71 | 5.47 | 5.47 | |
| Grey Fantail | 0.00 | 0.57 | 5.29 | 10.76 | |
| Red Wattlebird | 0.40 | 0.57 | 4.61 | 15.76 | |
| Australian Magpie | 0.46 | 0.29 | 4.51 | 19.87 | |
| 0.88 | 0.00 | 8.40 | 8.40 | ||
| Superb Fairy-wren | 0.25 | 0.83 | 5.68 | 14.07 | |
| 0.50 | 0.33 | 5.43 | 19.50 | ||
| New Holland Honeyeater | 0.50 | 0.67 | 4.67 | 24.18 | |
| 0.63 | 0.50 | 4.67 | 28.84 | ||
| Superb Fairy-wren | 0.00 | 0.79 | 6.20 | 6.20 | |
| Crimson Rosella | 0.00 | 0.63 | 5.45 | 11.66 | |
| 0.60 | 0.00 | 4.89 | 16.55 | ||
| Eastern Spinebill | 0.11 | 0.63 | 5.03 | 5.03 |
^ indicates introduced birds.