Long-term changes in avian community structure in a successional, forested, and managed plot in a reforesting landscape
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Published source details
Brooks E.W. & Bonter D.N. (2010) Long-term changes in avian community structure in a successional, forested, and managed plot in a reforesting landscape. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology (formerly The Wilson Bulletin), 122, 288-295.
Published source details Brooks E.W. & Bonter D.N. (2010) Long-term changes in avian community structure in a successional, forested, and managed plot in a reforesting landscape. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology (formerly The Wilson Bulletin), 122, 288-295.
Actions
This study is summarised as evidence for the following.
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Restore or create forests Action Link |
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Restore or create forests
A controlled study in the summers of 1969-2007 in New York State, USA (Brooks & Bonter 2010), found that species richness increased on a 9.3 ha forest site restored from an agricultural field (17 species increased and nine declined) and on a 10.7 ha site maintained at an early successional stage (an actively managed Christmas tree farm), but stayed constant at a 16.6 ha forest site. Total territory density declined on the restored site (from 96 territories in 1969-1973 to 57 in 1999-2003), although Neotropical migrant territories increased from zero to 30 and woodland species also increased. Territory density increased significantly in the managed plot (breeding pair density increased for 11 species and declined for three). The forest plot exhibited no significant difference in territory density or species richness over time.
Output references
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