4.7 Article

Conservation implications of a limited avian cross-habitat spillover in pasture lands

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 253, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108898

Keywords

Landscape complementation; Landscape supplementation; Stable isotopes; Agricultural landscapes; Brazilian Atlantic Forest; Birds

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2013/23457-6, 2013/12777-0, 2017/26093-6, 2019/13802-4, 2013/11032-0]
  2. Rufford Foundation [14223-1]
  3. Brazilian Ministry of Education (CAPES-DS)
  4. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [130963/2014-3]
  5. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development
  6. National Science Foundation [1158817]
  7. Office Of The Director
  8. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering [1158817] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Evidence shows that the cross-habitat spillover process plays a role in maintaining biodiversity in managed agricultural landscapes. Bird movement across cattle pasture matrices is limited, with species predominantly near forest edges. Different species have distinct resource use preferences, with forest cover affecting resource use patterns.
Increasing evidence demonstrates a role for the cross-habitat spillover process in the maintenance of biodiversity in managed agricultural landscapes. However, the mechanisms that drive this process are less well understood. In particular, it is critical to know how landscape structure modulates spillover movements, and whether species are moving through the matrix to acquire resources or simply to disperse between habitat fragments. We tested landscape effects and food resource use within cattle pasture matrices. We used mist-nets to collect data on avian communities across 51 sampling sites, spanning a forest cover gradient. We additionally integrated stable isotopic analysis (delta C-13 signature) to determine the provenance of resources used (either forest - dominated by C-3 plants; or pasture, dominated by C-4). Bird movement across pasture matrices was extremely reduced, and bird occupation was concentrated near forest edges. There was a clear distinction of resource use according to species' habitat preferences, with forest-species foraging predominantly in-forests, open-area species in pastures, and generalist species having more varied diets, but still relying on a large proportion of C-3 sources. Forest cover was unrelated to avian spillover from forests into pastures, but positively related to C-3 signatures for both forest and open-area associated species. Finally, we found that most birds moving from forests to pastures were habitat generalists (63%), and that pastures work as a barrier for forest-associated species movement. Landscapes dominated by pasture are very unfavorable to the conservation of forest species, but potentially can maintain ecosystem services from the spillover of generalist species.

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