School of Environment and Science, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.
E2M Pty Ltd, Milton, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2024 Aug 7;19(8):e0306842. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306842. eCollection 2024.
Conserving threatened species relies on an understanding of their habitat requirements. This is especially relevant for granivorous birds, whose habitat use and movement patterns are intricately linked to the spatial and temporal availability of resources such as food and water. In this study, we investigated the habitat use, home range and daily activity patterns of the Endangered Southern Black-throated Finch (SBTF; Poephila cincta cincta) within a 75,000 ha savanna woodland study area in northeastern Australia. This semi-arid region is one of the key remaining strongholds for the species and is characterised by substantially different habitat and climatic conditions than areas where previous research on this species has been undertaken. We radio tracked 142 SBTF using both manual tracking and an array of 27 automated radio towers, which revealed a strong preference for eucalypt-dominated grassy woodland communities. The preference for these habitats also increased with decreasing distance to permanent water. While SBTF occupied large home ranges, individual SBTF were largely sedentary during the radio tracking period (21.8, range = 0.83-120 days), with few landscape-scale movements of more than 4.5 km. Daily foraging activity of SBTF exhibited bimodal peaks in the early morning and late afternoon, while other activities were greatest from the late morning to the early afternoon. Compared to other estrildid finches, our research suggests that SBTF track resources at a local scale across a large home range. We postulate that in times of resource scarcity SBTF may use dietary diversification, instead of landscape or regional-scale nomadic movements, to meet their resource needs. The species' movement patterns underscore the importance of local scale habitat management to facilitate resource availability throughout the year. Furthermore, our research helps target monitoring designs for granivorous birds that focus on the species' diurnal activity patterns.
保护濒危物种依赖于对其栖息地需求的理解。这对于食谷鸟类尤为重要,它们的栖息地利用和移动模式与食物和水等资源的时空可获得性密切相关。在这项研究中,我们调查了濒危南黑喉雀(SBTF;Poephila cincta cincta)在澳大利亚东北部一个 75000 公顷的热带稀树草原林地研究区域内的栖息地利用、活动范围和日常活动模式。这个半干旱地区是该物种的关键剩余据点之一,其栖息地和气候条件与之前对该物种进行研究的地区有很大的不同。我们使用手动跟踪和 27 个自动无线电塔的阵列对 142 只 SBTF 进行了无线电跟踪,结果表明它们强烈偏爱以桉树为主的草地林地群落。对这些栖息地的偏好也随着到永久性水源的距离的减小而增加。虽然 SBTF 占据了较大的活动范围,但在无线电跟踪期间,个体 SBTF 大部分时间是静止的(21.8,范围= 0.83-120 天),很少有超过 4.5 公里的景观尺度移动。SBTF 的日常觅食活动在清晨和傍晚出现双峰高峰,而其他活动则在上午晚些时候到下午早些时候最为活跃。与其他 Estrildid finches 相比,我们的研究表明,SBTF 在大活动范围的局部尺度上跟踪资源。我们推测,在资源匮乏时期,SBTF 可能会通过饮食多样化,而不是景观或区域尺度的游牧运动,来满足其资源需求。该物种的移动模式强调了在本地尺度上进行栖息地管理以促进全年资源可用性的重要性。此外,我们的研究有助于针对食谷鸟类的监测设计,重点关注该物种的昼间活动模式。