Continent-scale pattern in temporal dynamics of avian assemblages
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Continent-scale pattern in temporal dynamics of avian assemblages |
---|---|
Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Apan, Armando (Author), Maron, Martine (Author) and Dunn, Peter K. (Author) |
Editors | Bunce, R., Jongman, Rob, Hojas, L. and Weel, S. |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Proceedings of the 7th International Association for Landscape Ecology World Congress (IALE 2007) |
Number of Pages | 2 |
Year | 2007 |
Place of Publication | Wageningen, Netherlands |
ISBN | 9789078514022 |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | http://www.lar.wur.nl/NL/nieuwsagenda/archief/agenda/2007/IALE_2007.htm |
Conference/Event | IALE 2007: 25 Years Landscape Ecology: Scientific Principles in Practice |
Event Details | IALE 2007: 25 Years Landscape Ecology: Scientific Principles in Practice Event Date 08 to end of 12 Jul 2007 Event Location Wageningen, Netherlands |
Abstract | A common method of characterizing the bird assemblages of sites in landscape ecological research is to conduct a series of snapshot-type surveys, often over less than one year (Maron et al. 2005). However, highly mobile taxa such as birds show substantial interannual variability in species richness and community composition (e.g. Holmes et al. 1986), and this may have implications for the veracity of snapshot-derived patterns. The environmental correlates of inter-annual variability in bird assemblages are not well known, although it seems likely that more climatically stable regions support less dynamic avian assemblages (Jarvinen 1979). We conducted a continent-scale study to investigate associations between environmental factors and annual bird assemblage turnover rates in Australia. Correlates of inter-annual bird assemblage variability have rarely been investigated at this scale as long-term data from across a broad area are required. However, the availability of long-term, large-scale databases from volunteer-based monitoring initiatives provides opportunities for comparisons across large areas. For example, data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey revealed increased annual turnover in landscapes with smaller forest patches (Boulinier et al. 2001). |
Keywords | bird population; avian population; wildlife surveys; migration |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 490502. Biostatistics |
310307. Population ecology | |
410404. Environmental management | |
Byline Affiliations | Department of Surveying and Land Information |
Department of Biological and Physical Sciences | |
Department of Mathematics and Computing | |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q0522/continent-scale-pattern-in-temporal-dynamics-of-avian-assemblages
Download files
594
total views37
total downloads2
views this month0
downloads this month