Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18735
Title: Long-term landscape change and bird abundance in Amazonian rainforest fragments
Authors: Stouffer, Philip C.
Bierregaard, Richard O.
Strong, Cheryl M.
Lovejoy, Thomas E.
Keywords: Abundance
Bird
Forest Dynamics
Habitat Fragmentation
Landscape Change
Population Decline
Rainforest
Animals
Biodiversity
Bird
Classification
Geography
Physiology
Population Dynamics
Statistical Analysis
Tree
Tropic Climate
Animal
Biodiversity
Birds
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Geography
Population Dynamics
Trees
Tropical Climate
Amazon Basin
Amazonas
Manaus
South America
Aves
Issue Date: 2006
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Conservation Biology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 20, Número 4, Pags. 1212-1223
Abstract: The rainforests of the Amazon basin are being cut by humans at a rate >20,000 km2/year, leading to smaller and more isolated patches of forest, with remaining fragments often in the range of 1-100 ha. We analyzed samples of understory birds collected over 20 years from a standardized mist-netting program in 1- to 100-ha rainforest fragments in a dynamic Amazonian landscape near Manaus, Brazil. Across bird guilds, the condition of second growth immediately surrounding fragments was often as important as fragment size or local forest cover in explaining variation in abundance. Some fragments surrounded by 100 m of open pasture showed reductions in insectivorous bird abundance of over 95%, even in landscapes dominated by continuous forest and old second growth. These extreme reductions may be typical throughout Amazonia in small (≤10 ha), isolated fragments of rainforest. Abundance for some guilds returned to preisolation levels in 10- and 100-ha fragments connected to continuous forest by 20-year-old second growth. Our results show that the consequences of Amazonian forest loss cannot be accurately described without explicit consideration of vegetation dynamics in matrix habitat. Any dichotomous classification of the landscape into "forest" and "nonforest" misses essential information about the matrix. ©2006 Society for Conservation Biology.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00427.x
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