4.2 Article

Nest Selection by Cavity-nesting Birds in Subtropical Montane Forests of the Andes: Implications for Sustainable Forest Management

Journal

BIOTROPICA
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 354-360

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
DOI: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2008.00481.x

Keywords

Argentina; forestry; logging; selva Tucumano-Boliviana; woodpeckers

Categories

Funding

  1. Rufford Small Grant for Nature Conservation, Wildlife Conservation Society Research Fellowship Program
  2. UNESCO-MAB Young Scientists Award
  3. University of Maine
  4. Idea Wild

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Development of sustainable forestry has been hampered in tropical countries by a scarcity of research on the ecological effects of logging. We focused on cavity-nesting birds, a group known to be sensitive to logging. Cavities used for nesting were not a random subset of all available suitable cavities. Birds selected cavities that were relatively high above the ground, had smaller entrances, and were excavated by woodpeckers. The use of tree species was also not random: Calycophyllum multiflorum, Blepharocalyx gigantea, and Podocarpus parlatorei were disproportionately important. Cavity nests were also more likely to be found in areas with trees with high mean diameter at breast height. This study emphasizes the need to maintain some unlogged forest patches within logging areas and retain certain species of trees. This study has implications for forest management in Argentina, where a new law mandates the sustainable use of forest resources and where many landowners are interested in forest certification.

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