Functional Richness and Relative Resilience of Bird Communities in Regions with Different Land Use Intensities

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Fischer, Joern
Blomberg, Simon Phillip
Montague-Drake, Rebecca
Felton, Adam
Stein, John
Lindenmayer, David B

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

Empirical estimates of the function and resilience of communities under different management regimes can provide valuable information for sustainable natural resource management, but such estimates are scarce to date. We quantified the functional richness and relative resilience of bird communities inhabiting five regions in southeastern Australia that represented different management regimes. First, we show that functional richness and relative resilience were reduced at species-poor sites in all regions. Second, we show that bird communities in agricultural regions had fewer body mass groups and fewer functional groups than expected by chance. This suggests that both the function and the resilience of bird communities in agricultural regions were reduced. The likely mechanisms for the observed loss of function and relative resilience are: (1) the simplification of landscape texture resulting in selective extinction of certain body mass groups; and (2) the selective extinction of certain functional groups that are particularly sensitive to intensive land use.

Description

Citation

Source

Ecosystems

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31