Foraging segregation in a breeding bird guild declines following nesting

2007 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander M. Mills

Ecological communities appear to have structure, and exploitation of food resources have commonly been implicated in contributing to that apparent structure. Avian communities are frequently used in foraging research, but such studies do not usually document within-landscape patterns of change over seasonal time. I studied a guild of twelve small, foliage-gleaning, insectivorous songbirds in their breeding landscape in central Ontario, Canada. By focussing on foraging preferences indicated by tree species, foraging height, and foraging maneuvers, I compared patterns among the breeding period (June), midsummer (late July and early August), and early autumn (late August to mid September) within the one landscape. Correspondence analysis indicates that each species foraged in a distinct manner, yet there was substantial foraging overlap at all times in preferred (i) foraging tree species, (ii) foraging height, and (iii) foraging maneuvers. As the season progressed, patterns related to preferred foraging height and foraging maneuvers did not change dramatically. However, patterns of preferred foraging tree species did change progressively from breeding to autumn. During the breeding period, the guild tended to exploit different tree species in a manner correlated with the relative availabilities of those species, but this was not the case in midsummer or autumn. By autumn, foraging tree preferences among species were much more homogeneous, especially among wood-warblers of the genus Dendroica Gray, 1842. Consequently, based on preferred foraging tree species, whatever segregation existed during breeding was largely disassembled by autumn.

1970 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 237
Author(s):  
WE Westman ◽  
DJ Anderson

Pattern analysis data are presented for a number of tree species populations sampled from two sites located in dry sclerophyll forest within the Ku-ring-gai Chase park of New South Wales. The distributions proved to be predominantly contagious or random, with regularity occurring only occasionally. Observed variations in the degree of aggregation exhibited by a species were taken into account in interpreting pattern analysis curves. The relation of pattern analysis data to sample quadrat data fitted to known mathematical models is extremely variable, and it is shown that pattern at block sizes other than the one under consideration may suppress the appearance of deviations from randomness at block sizes which do show contagion when sampled with randomly placed quadrats. The possible origins of contagious distributions in eucalypt forest are briefly discussed.


First Monday ◽  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Cerratto-Pargman ◽  
Daniel Pargman ◽  
Bonnie Nardi

Is the digital infrastructure and its footprint an ideological blind spot for recently emerging ecological communities, including eco-villages? This paper examines how a group of people who are concerned with environmental issues such as peak oil and climate change are orchestrating a transition toward a more sustainable and resilient way of living. We studied a Swedish eco-village, considering how computing in this community contributes to defining what alternative ways of living might look like in the twenty-first century. Drawing on a social-ecological perspective, the analysis illustrates, on the one hand, that the Internet, along with the digital devices we use to access it, capitalizes and mobilizes values, knowledge and social relationships that in turn enhance resilience in the eco-village. On the other hand, the analysis shows that an explicit focus on ecological values is not sufficient for a community of individuals to significantly transform Internet use to conform to ecological ideals. This work contributes to a deeper understanding of the imbrication of social technologies with practices that are oriented to perform sustainable and resilient ways of living.


1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (10) ◽  
pp. 2529-2532 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. McEnroe

The development cycle of Dermacentor variabilis (Say) in Nova Scotia allows the full production of diapause larvae from the spring adult breeding period. The overwinter stages, larvae and adults, cope with the harsh winter environment. The shift from the two cohort life cycle of D. variabilis in New England to the one cohort cycle in Nova Scotia removes the regulation involved in the passage from the spring adult cohort to the summer adult cohort.


Bird Study ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 225-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark W. Wilson ◽  
Josephine Pithon ◽  
Tom Gittings ◽  
Tom C. Kelly ◽  
Paul S. Giller ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roeland Kindt ◽  
◽  
Ian K Dawson ◽  
Jens-Peter B Lillesø ◽  
Alice Muchugi ◽  
...  

A systematic approach to tree planting and management globally is hindered by the limited synthesis of information sources on tree uses and species priorities. To help address this, the authors ‘mined’ information from 23 online global and regional databases to assemble a list of the most frequent tree species deemed useful for planting according to database mentions, with a focus on tropical regions. Using a simple vote count approach for ranking species, we obtained a shortlist of 100 trees mentioned in at least 10 of our data sources (the ‘top-100’ species). A longer list of 830 trees that were mentioned at least five times was also compiled. Our ‘top-100’ list indicated that the family Fabaceae (syn. Leguminosae) was most common. The information associated with our mined data sources indicated that the ‘top-100’ list consisted of a complementary group of species of differing uses. These included the following: for wood (mostly for timber) and fuel production, human nutrition, animal fodder supply, and environmental service provision (varied services). Of these uses, wood was most frequently specified, with fuel and food use also highly important. Many of the ‘top-100’ species were assigned multiple uses. The majority of the ‘top-100’ species had weediness characteristics according to ‘attribute’ invasiveness databases that were also reviewed, thereby demonstrating potential environmental concerns associated with tree planting that need to be balanced against environmental and livelihood benefits. Less than half of the ‘top-100’ species were included in the OECD Scheme for the Certification of Forest Reproductive Material, thus supporting a view that lack of germplasm access is a common concern for trees. A comparison of the ‘top-100’ species with regionally-defined tree inventories indicated their diverse continental origins, as would be anticipated from a global analysis. However, compared to baseline expectations, some geographic regions were better represented than others. Our analysis assists in priority-setting for research and serves as a guide to practical tree planting initiatives. We stress that this ‘top-100’ list does not necessarily represent tree priorities for the future, but provides a starting point for also addressing representation gaps. Indeed, our primary concern going forward is with the latter.


2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 206-212
Author(s):  
G. Kopij

Most studies on edge effect are related to the forest-field edge, i.e. to the ecotone. However, there is a lack of studies attempting to investigate the effect of the distance from the forest/field edge on the avian communities in large continuous forests. The purpose of this study was to investigate this issue. The study area comprised a continuous coniferous forest, the so called Niemodlin Forest, situated in Opole Silesia, SW Poland. The line transect method has been employed in this study. In total, 54 breeding bird species were recorded. On particular 0.5 km section, the numbers varied from 34 to 48. Both the number of species and number of breeding pairs only slightly decreased with the distance from the forest/field edge. Overall, the differences between the mean densities of breeding species on 10 sections were not statistically significant. The Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs was by far the most numerous bird species, recorded as eudominant in 164 out of 165 sections. The Chiffchaff Phylloscopus collybita, Willow Warbler Phyloscopus trochilus and Blackap Sylvia atricapilla were dominants in all 10 sections, while the Blackbird Turdus merula dominated in nine (90%) and the Robin Erithacus rubecula in eight (80%) sections. The communal dominance slightly increased, but the number of dominant species and Pielou’s Evenness Index remained stable with the increase of the distance from the forest/field edge. While Shannon’s Diversity Index remained constant, Simpson’s Diversity Index decreased markedly with the increase in distance from the forest/field edge. The proportion of long-distance migrants slightly decreased, while that of short-distance migrants and residents remained constant with the increase in the distance from the forest/field edge. Strikingly, no such changes in the proportion of all feeding guilds were shown. More than half of all breeding bird species show a negative correlation between population density and the distance from the forest/field edge. The dominance of some species decreased with the increase of the distance from the forest/field edge: Hawfinch Coccothraustes coccothraustes, Starling Sturnus vulgaris, Blue Tit Parusa caeruleus, Raven Corvus corax, Wren Troglodytes troglodytes, Wood Pigeon Columba palumbus, and Wood Lark Lullula arborea. With the exception of the Yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella, the clearcuts in this study, not only failed to increase, but most probably caused a decrease in the number of both species and individuals. It is because clearing not only creates edges, but also causes loss of forest habitat and often results in forest fragmentation. Edge and area effect may in fact interact, in such way that the edge effect may drive out the area effect, causing the increase.


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