4.4 Article

RECOVERY OF UNDERSTORY BIRD MOVEMENT ACROSS THE INTERFACE OF PRIMARY AND SECONDARY AMAZON RAINFOREST

Journal

AUK
Volume 130, Issue 3, Pages 459-468

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1525/auk.2013.12202

Keywords

bird communities; edges; fragmentation; landscape effects; Neotropical birds; secondary forest; terrestrial insectivores

Categories

Funding

  1. World Wildlife Fund-U.S.
  2. MacArthur Foundation
  3. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
  4. U.S. Agency for International Development
  5. U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  6. Brazil's Ministry for Science and Technology
  7. U.S. National Science Foundation [LTREB 0545491]
  8. Summit Foundation
  9. Shell Oil
  10. Citibank
  11. Champion International
  12. Homeland Foundation
  13. National Geographic Society
  14. Division Of Environmental Biology
  15. Direct For Biological Sciences [1257340] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Amazonia now contains vast areas of secondary forest because of widespread regeneration following timber harvests, yet the value of secondary forest to wildlife remains poorly understood. Secondary forest becomes structurally similar to primary forest after abandonment, and therefore we predicted that avian movement across the interface of primary and secondary forest (hereafter the interface) would gradually increase with time since abandonment until recovery to pre-isolation levels. From 1992 to 2011, we captured 2,773 understory birds of 10 foraging guilds along the interface of primary forest fragments and zero- to 30-year-old secondary forest at the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project near Manaus, Brazil. Our objectives were to understand the differences in land-use history that affect cross-interface movement and to determine how long it takes each guild to recover to pre-isolation capture rates. Across guilds, age of secondary forest within 100 m of the interface was the most important explanatory variable affecting capture rates; rates increased with age of secondary forest for all guilds except non-forest species. Mean recovery to pre-isolation was 26 years (asymmetric SE = 13 years below and 16 years above estimate) after secondary forest abandonment and 9 of 10 guilds recovered within 13 to 34 years. In the slowest guild to recover, terrestrial insectivores, 6 of 12 species were never caught along the interface, and we projected that this guild would recover in 60 years. Our recovery estimates quantify the dynamic permeability of the interface and contribute to a better understanding of the value of secondary forests as corridors among primary forest fragments. Received 26 October 2012, accepted 19 May 2013.

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