U.S. Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service, Rangeland Resources Research Unit, Fort Collins, CO 80526, U.S.A..
Conserv Biol. 2013 Apr;27(2):324-34. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12013. Epub 2013 Jan 17.
Colonial burrowing herbivores can modify vegetation structure, create belowground refugia, and generate landscape heterogeneity, thereby affecting the distribution and abundance of associated species. Black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) are such a species, and they may strongly affect the abundance and composition of grassland bird communities. We examined how prairie dog colonies in the North American Great Plains affect bird species and community composition. Areas occupied by prairie dogs, characterized by low percent cover of grass, high percent cover of bare soil, and low vegetation height and density, supported a breeding bird community that differed substantially from surrounding areas that lacked prairie dogs. Bird communities on colony sites had significantly greater densities of large-bodied carnivores (Burrowing Owls [Athene cunicularia], Mountain Plovers, [Charadrius montanus], and Killdeer [Charadrius vociferus]) and omnivores consisting of Horned Larks (Eremophila alpestris) and McCown's Longspurs (Rhynchophanes mccownii) than bird communities off colony sites. Bird communities off colony sites were dominated by small-bodied insectivorous sparrows (Ammodramus spp.) and omnivorous Lark Buntings (Calamospiza melanocorys), Vesper Sparrows (Pooecetes gramineus), and Lark Sparrows (Chondestes grammacus). Densities of 3 species of conservation concern and 1 game species were significantly higher on colony sites than off colony sites, and the strength of prairie dog effects was consistent across the northern Great Plains. Vegetation modification by prairie dogs sustains a diverse suite of bird species in these grasslands. Collectively, our findings and those from previous studies show that areas in the North American Great Plains with prairie dog colonies support higher densities of at least 9 vertebrate species than sites without colonies. Prairie dogs affect habitat for these species through multiple pathways, including creation of belowground refugia, supply of prey for specialized predators, modification of vegetation structure within colonies, and increased landscape heterogeneity.
穴居的殖民食草动物可以改变植被结构,创造地下避难所,并产生景观异质性,从而影响相关物种的分布和丰度。黑尾草原犬鼠(Cynomys ludovicianus)就是这样一种物种,它们可能会强烈影响草原鸟类群落的丰富度和组成。我们研究了北美大平原上的草原犬鼠群体如何影响鸟类物种和群落组成。草原犬鼠占据的区域以草覆盖率低、裸土覆盖率高、植被高度和密度低为特征,支持着一个与周围没有草原犬鼠的区域截然不同的繁殖鸟类群落。殖民地地区的鸟类群落中,大型食肉动物(穴鸮[Athene cunicularia]、山鹬[Charadrius montanus]和普通燕鸻[Charadrius vociferus])和杂食动物(角百灵[Eremophila alpestris]和小嘲鸫[Rhynchophanes mccownii])的密度显著高于非殖民地地区。非殖民地地区的鸟类群落以小型食虫雀形目(Ammodramus spp.)和杂食性云雀(Calamospiza melanocorys)、苇鹀(Pooecetes gramineus)和歌百灵(Chondestes grammacus)为主。有 3 种受保护关注的物种和 1 种狩猎物种的密度在殖民地地区显著高于非殖民地地区,草原犬鼠的影响强度在整个北美大平原上是一致的。草原犬鼠对植被的改造维持了这些草原上多种鸟类物种的生存。总的来说,我们的发现和以前的研究表明,北美大平原上有草原犬鼠群体的地区至少支持 9 种脊椎动物物种的密度高于没有群体的地区。草原犬鼠通过多种途径影响这些物种的栖息地,包括创造地下避难所、为专门的捕食者提供猎物、在群体内部改变植被结构以及增加景观异质性。