Differential effects of vegetation restoration in Mediterranean abandoned cropland by secondary succession and pine plantations on bird assemblages
Identifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/23058DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2010.04.004
ISSN: 0378-1127
Publisher
Elsevier
Date
2010Bibliographic citation
Forest Ecology and Management, 2010, v.260, n.1, p.87-95
Keywords
Bird composition
Conservation
Habitat breadth
Regional avifauna
Species richness
Vegetation complexity
Description / Notes
Las figuras y tablas que contiene el documento se localizan al final del mismo
Project
CGL2007-60533-BOS (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)
S2009AMB/1783/REMEDINAL (Comunidad de Madrid)
S0505AMB/0355/REMEDINAL (Comunidad de Madrid)
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Publisher's version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2010.04.004Rights
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0
España© Elsevier, 2010
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
Two contrasting trajectories for vegetation restoration in agricultural landscapes are secondary succession following cropland abandonment that can regenerate woodlands (passive restoration) and conversion of cropland to tree plantations (active restoration), which have mostly focused on pine species in the Mediterranean Basin. We compared the effects of these two contrasting trajectories of vegetation restoration on bird assemblages in central Spain. Vegetation structure differed in the two restoration trajectories, pine plantations attaining higher tree cover and height (31% and 4.1 m, respectively) but lower strata complexity than secondary shrubland and holm oak woodland (which attained 10% and 1.4 m of tree cover and height, respectively). Bird species richness differed in stands under active or passive restoration trajectories, the former collecting a higher total number of species (4.2 species per 0.78 ha plot) than the latter (3.5 species per plot). The number of forest species increased with vegetation maturity in both restoration trajectories, but especially in stands under active restoration. The occurrence of woodland generalist species increased and of species inhabiting open habitats decreased in actively restored stands, being some of these latter species of high conservation priority in the European context but relatively common at the regional level. Bird species inhabiting pine plantations had broader habitat breadth at the regional level than those inhabiting secondary shrublands and woodlands. Maximum regional density did not differ between both restoration trajectories, but it increased with development of the herbaceous layer only at the secondary succession trajectory. The relative importance of species of European biogeographic origin was higher in mature pine plantations (58.9% of total bird abundance) than in mature holm oak woodlands (34.4%), whereas that of Mediterranean species was considerably higher in the latter (40.1%) than in the former (20%). Bird assemblages of relatively small patches of pine plantations are unable to reflect the regional avifauna, in contrast with the relationships between local and regional assemblage characteristics that can be found in isolated natural forests. We conclude that programs of vegetation restoration should base upon a range of approaches that include passive restoration, active restoration with a variety of tree and shrub species, and mixed models to conciliate agricultural production, vegetation restoration and conservation of target species.
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