Riparian corridors enhance movement of a forest specialist bird in fragmented tropical forest
- 16 December 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (50), 19774-19779
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0803530105
Abstract
Riparian corridors and fencerows are hypothesized to increase the persistence of forest animals in fragmented landscapes by facilitating movement among suitable habitat patches. This function may be critically important for forest birds, which have declined dramatically in fragmented habitats. Unfortunately, direct evidence of corridor use has been difficult to collect at landscape scales and this limits support for corridors in conservation planning. Using telemetry and handheld GPS units, we examined the movement of forest birds by translocating territorial individuals of barred antshrikes (Thamnophilus doliatus; a forest specialist) and rufous-naped wrens (Campylorhynchus rufinucha; a forest generalist) 0.7-1.9 km from their territories in the highly fragmented tropical dry forest of Costa Rica. In each translocation, the directly intervening habitat comprised 1 of 3 treatments: forested riparian corridor, linear living fencerow, or open pasture. Antshrikes returned faster and with greater success in riparian corridors relative to pasture treatments. This species also traveled more directly in riparian corridor treatments, detoured to use forested routes in the other 2 treatments, and did not use fencerows even when they led directly to their home territories. By contrast, wrens were more likely to use fencerows when returning, and return time and success were equivalent among the 3 treatments. Both species crossed fewer gaps in tree cover during riparian corridor treatments than in fencerow or pasture treatments. We conclude that antshrikes, which may be representative of other forest specialists, use forested corridors for movement in this landscape and that fencerows are avoided as movement conduits.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Territory size of three Antbirds (Aves, Passeriformes) in an Atlantic Forest fragment in southeastern BrazilRevista Brasileira de Zoologia, 2006
- Positional entropy during pigeon homing II: navigational interpretation of Bayesian latent state modelsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2004
- Comparative Permeability of Roads, Rivers, and Meadows to Songbirds in Banff National ParkConservation Biology, 2003
- Avian Persistence in Fragmented RainforestScience, 2002
- INFLUENCE OF FOREST COVER ON THE MOVEMENTS OF FOREST BIRDS: A HOMING EXPERIMENTEcology, 2001
- Global Biodiversity Scenarios for the Year 2100Science, 2000
- Composition Changes in a Subandean Avifauna after Long‐Term Forest FragmentationConservation Biology, 1999
- Do Habitat Corridors Provide Connectivity?Conservation Biology, 1998
- Use of Riparian Buffer Strips as Movement Corridors by Forest BirdsConservation Biology, 1996
- The island dilemma: Lessons of modern biogeographic studies for the design of natural reservesBiological Conservation, 1975