4.7 Article

The relationship between shelterwood cuts and crown thinnings and the abundance and distribution of birds in a southern New England forest

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 258, Issue 3, Pages 314-322

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2009.04.020

Keywords

Avian diversity; Crown thinnings; Shelterwoods; Southern New England

Categories

Funding

  1. Yale University and Yale School Forests
  2. NSF International Research Fellowship [IFRP 0601909]

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Forest regeneration methods such as shelterwood treatments have been shown to substantially increase the diversity of bird species, specifically of species that prefer early seral forests, now rare in the eastern United States. Stand improvement techniques such as thinnings have also been found to increase avian diversity under some conditions. A sustainably managed forest, however, must simultaneously apply regenerative harvesting with stand improvements, and the effect of such treatment combinations on bird community composition is not clear. We compared bird distribution and abundance on shelterwood cuts, crown thinnings, and unmanaged stands at the Yale Myers Forest, a large privately owned and actively managed forest in southern New England. Bird abundance and species diversity was highest in shelterwood cuts and lowest in unmanaged forest, with thinnings being intermediary. Different suites of species inhabited the three treatments, with 18 of 49 common species differing significantly in their abundances between treatments. Characteristics of the vegetation that were directly influenced by silvicultural intervention, including canopy openness, seedling regeneration and vertical structural diversity, appeared to be the dominant drivers of bird abundance. The abundances of some species or groups of species were correlated with the number of trees retained in the implementation of the forestry practices. In conjunction with the conservation of a variety of mature forest habitats, regenerative cuts and stand improvement techniques can be used together to sustain a diverse assemblage of bird species. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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