Miller Robert A, Bond Laura, Migas Patrick N, Carlisle Jay D, Kaltenecker Gregory S
Intermountain Bird Observatory, 1910 University Drive, MS1515, Boise, Idaho 83725.
Biomolecular Research Center, 1910 University Drive, MS1515, Boise, Idaho 83725.
West Birds. 2017 Mar;48:35-55. doi: 10.21199/WB481.3. Epub 2017 Mar 21.
Sagebrush ( spp.) steppe is one of North America's most imperiled ecosystems, as the result of many factors including grazing, development, fire, and invasion of exotic plants. Threats to sagebrush steppe are expected to increase because of climate change and further human development. Many songbirds use sagebrush steppe opportunistically, but a few obligate species are dependent on it. To quantify the habitat associations of three sagebrush obligates, the Sage Thrasher (), Sagebrush Sparrow (), and Brewer's Sparrow (), and nine other songbird species that use this habitat, we surveyed across a broad region of Idaho. At each of 104 sites, we selected three plots, one each in relatively poor, moderate, and good condition, defined qualitatively by the cover of native shrubs. We quantified bird abundance by point counts, described the habitat at these points by a line-intercept method, and at each plot calculated the fraction of a circle (radius 1 km) covered in shrubs or grassland. We compared two-scale occupancy models based on these data by the information-theoretic approach. According to the models, our qualitative assessment of habitat condition within a site distinguished birds' use of relatively good habitat from their use of poor habitats only, not from those in moderate condition. Thus the sagebrush-obligate species may tolerate some local habitat degradation, at least up to some unidentified threshold. Occurrence of all three sagebrush obligates correlated well with one or more characteristics of sagebrush such as its cover, height, or heterogeneity in height. They differed in the Sage Thrasher being most sensitive to sagebrush cover, the Sagebrush Sparrow being found more often at lower elevations, and the Brewer's Sparrow being less sensitive to ground cover. The nine other species evaluated were less or negatively associated with attributes of sagebrush. On the basis of these results, we suggest that the three sagebrush obligates are best conserved by promoting shrublands over a broad range of elevations, containing both sagebrush and other shrubs in patches of mixed height, and minimizing invasive annual grasses.
由于包括放牧、开发、火灾和外来植物入侵等多种因素,艾草(蒿属植物)草原是北美最濒危的生态系统之一。由于气候变化和进一步的人类发展,预计艾草草原面临的威胁将会增加。许多鸣禽会机会性地利用艾草草原,但也有一些专性物种依赖于此。为了量化三种艾草专性物种(艾草鹪鹩、艾草雀鹀和布鲁尔氏雀鹀)以及其他九种利用该栖息地的鸣禽物种的栖息地关联,我们在爱达荷州的广大区域进行了调查。在104个地点中的每一个地点,我们选择了三个样地,分别处于相对较差、中等和良好状况,根据本地灌木的覆盖度进行定性定义。我们通过点计数法量化鸟类数量,通过线截距法描述这些点的栖息地,并在每个样地计算以灌木或草地覆盖的圆(半径1公里)的比例。我们采用信息论方法基于这些数据比较了双尺度占有率模型。根据模型,我们对一个地点内栖息地状况的定性评估仅区分了鸟类对相对良好栖息地与较差栖息地的利用,而无法区分与中等状况栖息地的利用差异。因此,艾草专性物种可能能够容忍一定程度的局部栖息地退化,至少在达到某个未明确的阈值之前如此。所有三种艾草专性物种的出现与艾草的一个或多个特征密切相关,如艾草的覆盖度、高度或高度异质性。它们的不同之处在于,艾草鹪鹩对艾草覆盖度最为敏感,艾草雀鹀更常出现在较低海拔地区,而布鲁尔氏雀鹀对地面覆盖度不太敏感。评估的其他九个物种与艾草的属性关联较少或呈负相关。基于这些结果,我们建议,通过在广泛的海拔范围内推广包含艾草和其他混合高度斑块中的其他灌木的灌丛,并尽量减少入侵性一年生草本植物,来最好地保护这三种艾草专性物种。