期刊论文详细信息
Avian Conservation and Ecology
An Estimate of Nest Loss in Canada Due to Industrial Forestry Operations
Erin M. Bayne1  Amy G. Wilson2  Steven L. Van Wilgenburg3  Keith A. Hobson4 
[1] Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta;Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan;Environment Canada;S&T Branch, Wildlife and Landscape Science Directorate;
关键词: adult recruitment;    boreal;    commercial forestry;    incidental loss;    nests;   
DOI  :  10.5751/ACE-00583-080205
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Annual loss of nests by industrial (nonwoodlot) forest harvesting in Canada was estimated using two avian point-count data sources: (1) the Boreal Avian Monitoring Project (BAM) dataset for provinces operating in this biome and (2) available data summarized for the major (nonboreal) forest regions of British Columbia. Accounting for uncertainty in the proportion of harvest occurring during the breeding season and in avian nesting densities, our estimate ranges from 616 thousand to 2.09 million nests. Estimates of the impact on numbers of individuals recruited into the adult breeding population were made based on the application of survivorship estimates at various stages of the life cycle. Future improvements to this estimate are expected as better and more extensive avian breeding pair density estimates become available and as provincial forestry statistics become more refined, spatially and temporally. The effect of incidental take due to forestry is not uniform and is disproportionately centered in the southern boreal. Those species whose ranges occur primarily in these regions are most at risk for industrial forestry in general and for incidental take in particular. Refinements to the nest loss estimate for industrial forestry in Canada will be achieved primarily through the provision of more accurate estimates of the area of forest harvested annually during the breeding season stratified by forest type and Bird Conservation Region (BCR). A better understanding of survivorship among life-history stages for forest birds would also allow for better modeling of the effect of nest loss on adult recruitment. Finally, models are needed to project legacy effects of forest harvesting on avian populations that take into account forest succession and accompanying cumulative effects of landscape change.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   

  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:0次