In a mountain context, the forest-shrub ecotone is an area of high biodiversity. Relatively little is known about the habitat requirements of birds in this habitat, yet it is facing potential threats from changes in grazing practices and climate change. Moreover, it is not clear at which scale habitat associations should be assessed in Alpine birds. Further information on key habitat components afecting bird communities of the ecotone is needed in order to inform management strategies to counteract potential habitat loss, and to better inform predictions of how bird communities may be afected by future environmental change. Data on bird occurrence and broadscale (land cover) and fnescale (vegetation structure and shrub species composition) habitat variables were collected in an Alpine forest-shrub ecotone in Val Troncea (northwestern Italian Alps) in order to address two objectives: to identify the key habitat variables associated with the occurrence of individual species and with the diversity of the bird community; and, to assess which scale of habitat measurement (broadscale, fnescale or both combined) is needed to model bird occurrence. Broadscale variables, or combinations of broadscale and fnescale variables, tended to have the best performing models. When combined models performed best, shrub species identity was included in many cases. Shrubs also played an important role in explaining variations in species diversity and richness. Vegetation structure was of relatively little importance, either for individual bird species or for species richness and diversity. These fndings suggest that management should strive to maintain a mosaic of habitats whilst minimizing forest encroachment, which could be achieved through targeted grazing. Broadscale habitat data and data on shrub species composition should provide a sufcient basis for identifying relevant species-specifc habitat parameters in a mountain environment in order to model future scenarios of efects of habitat change on the bird community of the alpine forest-shrub ecotone.

The contribution of broadscale and fnescale habitat structure to the distribution and diversity of birds in an Alpine forest‑shrub ecotone

Susanne Jähnig;Riccardo Alba;Cristina Vallino;Marco Pittarello;Antonio Rolando;Dan Chamberlain
2018-01-01

Abstract

In a mountain context, the forest-shrub ecotone is an area of high biodiversity. Relatively little is known about the habitat requirements of birds in this habitat, yet it is facing potential threats from changes in grazing practices and climate change. Moreover, it is not clear at which scale habitat associations should be assessed in Alpine birds. Further information on key habitat components afecting bird communities of the ecotone is needed in order to inform management strategies to counteract potential habitat loss, and to better inform predictions of how bird communities may be afected by future environmental change. Data on bird occurrence and broadscale (land cover) and fnescale (vegetation structure and shrub species composition) habitat variables were collected in an Alpine forest-shrub ecotone in Val Troncea (northwestern Italian Alps) in order to address two objectives: to identify the key habitat variables associated with the occurrence of individual species and with the diversity of the bird community; and, to assess which scale of habitat measurement (broadscale, fnescale or both combined) is needed to model bird occurrence. Broadscale variables, or combinations of broadscale and fnescale variables, tended to have the best performing models. When combined models performed best, shrub species identity was included in many cases. Shrubs also played an important role in explaining variations in species diversity and richness. Vegetation structure was of relatively little importance, either for individual bird species or for species richness and diversity. These fndings suggest that management should strive to maintain a mosaic of habitats whilst minimizing forest encroachment, which could be achieved through targeted grazing. Broadscale habitat data and data on shrub species composition should provide a sufcient basis for identifying relevant species-specifc habitat parameters in a mountain environment in order to model future scenarios of efects of habitat change on the bird community of the alpine forest-shrub ecotone.
2018
159
3
747
759
Habitat management,Grazing,Mountains,Vegetation structure,Species distribution models,Habitat mosaic
Susanne Jähnig, Riccardo Alba, Cristina Vallino, Domenico Rosselli, Marco Pittarello, Antonio Rolando, Dan Chamberlain
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1880375
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