Author:
Adams Heidi L.,Wes Burger L.,Riffell Sam
Abstract
Conservation Reserve Program Conservation Practice 33 (CP33: Conservation Buffers for Upland Birds) provides
habitat for grassland birds in agriculture-dominated landscapes. However, landscape context and adjacency of other
land covers may influence colonization, occupancy, and reproductive performance of breeding grassland birds in buffers.
Our objective was to determine how edge effects influence diversity and density of breeding grassland birds in CP33
buffers. Data collected during transect surveys in CP33 buffers at a privately-owned farm in Clay County, Mississippi,
USA during the 20072009 breeding seasons indicated that buffers with a woody edge had the least diversity and density
of grassland and facultative grassland birds. Dickcissels (Spiza americana), the most abundant grassland bird species detected
in buffers, had a lower density in woodland-bordered buffers than in grassland-bordered buffers. Red-winged
Blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) had a lower density in buffers adjacent to woodlands than buffers adjacent to developed
areas and those bordered on both sides by crop fields. Conversely, Indigo Buntings, (Passerina cyanea) a woodland edge
species, had the greatest density in woodland-bordered buffers when compared to buffers adjacent to grassland and developed
areas. These results demonstrate that adjacency influences colonization processes and conservation design should
explicitly incorporate local landscape context in field and farm-scale conservation plans. Where conservation of obligate
grassland birds is a primary objective of native grass conservation buffers, avoidance of buffer establishment adjacent to
woodlands may maximize environmental services as measured by grassland bird diversity and density.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
3 articles.
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