Long-term avifaunal impoverishment in an isolated tropical woodlot.

Conserv Biol

Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 14 Science Drive 4, Singapore 117543, Republic of Singapore.

Published: June 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • Long-term extinction patterns in isolated tropical forest patches, like the Bogor Botanical Gardens, highlight a significant decline in bird species, losing 59% of original richness since 1936.
  • Large-bodied birds were particularly vulnerable to extinction early on, but other species traits didn't predict vulnerability post-1987.
  • Factors such as habitat reduction, isolation, high human activity, and poor management practices have severely impacted the sustainability of bird populations in these forest fragments.

Article Abstract

Long-term (> 50 years) extinction patterns and processes in isolated tropical forest patches are poorly understood. Considering that forest fragments are rapidly becoming the common feature of most tropical landscapes, data on the long-term conservation value of such fragments are urgently needed. We report on avifaunal turnover in a tropical woodlot (Bogor Botanical Gardens; 86 ha; 54% native and 46% introduced plants; mean 83,649 visitors/month) that has been surveyed several times before and after its isolation in 1936. By 2004 the original avifaunal richness of this woodlot declined by 59% (97 to 40 species) and its forest-dependent avifauna declined by 60% (30 to 12 species). Large-bodied birds were particularly prone to extinction before 1987, but following this time none of the species traits we studied could be considered predictive of extinction proneness. All seven forest-dependent bird species that attempted to colonize this woodlot by 1987 perished thereafter. Our results show that area reduction, isolation, intense human use, and perverse management (e.g., understory removal) of this patch have probably negatively affected the long-term sustainability of its forest avifauna.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00363.xDOI Listing

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