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Library Conservation of Forest Birds: Evidence of a Shifting Baseline in Community Structure

Conservation of Forest Birds: Evidence of a Shifting Baseline in Community Structure

Conservation of Forest Birds: Evidence of a Shifting Baseline in Community Structure

Resource information

Date of publication
декабря 2010
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201600017933

Quantifying changes in forest bird diversity is an essential task for developing effective conservation actions. When subtle changes in diversity accumulate over time, annual comparisons may offer an incomplete perspective of changes in diversity. In this case, progressive change, the comparison of changes in diversity from a baseline condition, may offer greater insight because changes in diversity are assessed over longer periods of times. Our objectives were to determine how forest bird diversity has changed over time and whether those changes were associated with forest disturbance. We used North American Breeding Bird Survey data, a time series of Landsat images classified with respect to land cover change, and mixed-effects models to associate changes in forest bird community structure with forest disturbance, latitude, and longitude in the conterminous United States for the years 1985 to 2006. We document a significant divergence from the baseline structure for all birds of similar migratory habit and nest location, and all forest birds as a group from 1985 to 2006. Unexpectedly, decreases in progressive similarity resulted from small changes in richness (

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Rittenhouse, Chadwick D.
Pidgeon, Anna M.
Albright, Thomas P.
Culbert, Patrick D.
Clayton, Murray K.
Flather, Curtis H.
Huang, Chengquan
Masek, Jeffrey G.
Stewart, Susan I.
Radeloff, Volker C.
Hector, Andy

Data Provider
Geographical focus