Assessing the Influence of Anthropogenic Land-Use Changes on Bird Diversity and Feeding Guilds—A Case Study of Kalametiya Lagoon (Southern Sri Lanka)

Author:

Bernard Tom1ORCID,Kodikara K. A. S.2,Sleutel Jani3,Wijeratne G. G. N. K.2ORCID,Hugé Jean1345,Kumara M. P.6,Weerasinghe M. A. Y. N.7,Ranakawa D. P. D.2,Thakshila W. A. K. G.8,Dahdouh-Guebas Farid139

Affiliation:

1. Systems Ecology and Resource Management Research Unit (SERM), Department of Organism Biology, Université Libre de Bruxelles, 1050 Brussels, Belgium

2. Department of Botany, Faculty of Science, University of Ruhuna, Matara 81000, Sri Lanka

3. Ecology & Biodiversity Research Unit, Biology Department, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, 1050 Brussels, Belgium

4. Department of Environmental Sciences, Open University of The Netherlands, 6401 Heerlen, The Netherlands

5. Centre for Environmental Sciences, Research Group Zoology: Biodiversity and Toxicology, Hasselt University, 3500 Diepenbeek, Belgium

6. Faculty of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, Ocean University of Sri Lanka, Tangalle 82200, Sri Lanka

7. Department of Zoology and Environment Sciences, Faculty of Sciences, University of Colombo, Colombo 00300, Sri Lanka

8. Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of Ruhuna, Matara 81000, Sri Lanka

9. Mangrove Specialist Group (MSG), Species Survival Commission (SSC), International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), London NW1 4RY, UK

Abstract

Kalametiya Lagoon, a highly threatened Sri Lankan wetland, has undergone drastic hydrological changes in recent decades, due to an upstream irrigation project. These changes led to the invasion of the lagoon water by monospecific Sonneratia caseolaris mangrove stands and Typha angustifolia reedbeds. As Kalametiya has been a nationally recognized bird sanctuary since 1984, this invasion is expected to have brought significant changes upon local avifauna. Therefore, this study aimed at determining the lagoon’s current bird diversity and distribution in relation with habitat types and environmental variables. Thirty-seven point-count stations were studied, between January and April 2022. Seventy-nine bird species, including four endemic and ten nationally threatened species, were encountered during the study period. Invertebrate feeders and polyphages were the richest and most diverse guilds. Bird communities were also found richer and more diverse in T. angustifolia reedbeds than in S. caseolaris mangroves. As feeding guild composition was significantly influenced by several environmental variables (i.e., water nitrate content, water TDS, water pH, soil pH), guilds could have great potential as bioindicators of the ecosystem if further studies are done to explore these relationships. Considering the important bird diversity found in the new habitats, this research brings additional proof that a management aiming at restoring the lagoon to its past state would bring significant changes to its avifaunal community. These changes could, in the future, be more precisely defined by a thorough comparison with past inventories of the lagoon’s bird community.

Funder

Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degree in Tropical Biodiversity and Ecosystems

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

Reference68 articles.

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