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Biodiversity and Conservation

Publication date: 2008-01-01
Volume: 17 Pages: 53 - 69
Publisher: Springer (part of Springer Nature)

Author:

Aerts, Raf
Lerouge, Frederik ; November, Eva ; Lens, Luc ; Hermy, Martin ; Muys, Bart

Keywords:

bird, conservation, forest fragments, exclosures, Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Biodiversity Conservation, Ecology, Environmental Sciences, Biodiversity & Conservation, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, avian species diversity, Ethiopia, fragmentation, matrix habitat, protected area management, semiarid, small patches, restoration, TROPICAL RAIN-FOREST, COMMUNITY COMPOSITION, SPECIES RICHNESS, ASSEMBLAGES, DIVERSITY, FRAGMENTS, ABUNDANCE, RESTORATION, PERSISTENCE, ENCLOSURES, 0501 Ecological Applications, 0502 Environmental Science and Management, 0602 Ecology, 3103 Ecology, 4102 Ecological applications, 4104 Environmental management

Abstract:

The few remaining Afromontane forest fragments in northern Ethiopia and the surrounding degraded, semiarid matrix form a habitat mosaic of varying suitability for forest birds. To evaluate the effect of recent land rehabilitation efforts on bird community composition and diversity, we studied bird species distributions in ten small forest fragments (0.40–20.95 ha), five grazing exclosures (ten-year-old forest restoration areas without wood extraction and grazing livestock) and three grazed matrix sites during the rainy season (July-October 2004) using 277 one-hour species counts. Based on the distribution pattern of 146 bird species, sites were assigned to one of three bird communities (birds of moist forest, dry forest or degraded savanna), each occupying a well-defined position along an environmental gradient reflecting decreasing vegetation structure and density. All three communities were representative of the avifauna of Afrotropical Highland open forest and woodland with a high proportion of invasive and competitive generalist species (31%). Apart from these, exclosures shared more species with forest fragments (20%) than did the grazed matrix (5%), indicating local ecosystem recovery. By increasing habitat heterogeneity, exclosures have the potential to enhance landscape connectivity for forest birds and are, therefore, an effective instrument for conserving species in a fragmented landscape. However, 52 bird species (36%) occurred exclusively within forest patches and many forest birds that use exclosures are unlikely to maintain viable populations when forest fragments disappear, particularly as forest fragments may be a critical resource during the hot dry season. This highlights the high conservation value of small isolated forest fragments for less tolerant, forest-limited and/or biome-restricted species.