Artículo de revista
Linking forest structure and composition: Avian diversity in successional forests of Chiloé Island, Chile
Fecha
2005Registro en:
Biological Conservation, Volumen 123, Issue 1, 2018, Pages 91-101
00063207
10.1016/j.biocon.2004.10.011
Autor
Díaz, Iván A.
Armesto, Juan J.
Reid, Sharon
Sieving, Kathryn E.
Willson, Mary F.
Institución
Resumen
We show how Chilean forest bird species richness, abundance and guild structure changes as a function of structural properties of forest stands. We surveyed bird assemblages in two old-growth (>200 years), two mid-successional (30-60 years), and two early-successional forest stands (4-20 years), from November 1999 to September 2000, on Chiloé Island, southern Chile (42°S). Birds were grouped into four habitat-use guilds: large-tree users, vertical-profile generalists, understory species, and shrub-users that occasionally use forests. We recorded a total of 24 bird species: 21 in old-growth, 14 in mid-successional and 16 in early-successional stands. Large-tree users and understory birds were most abundant in old-growth stands, vertical-profile generalists were common in both old-growth and mid-successional stands, and shrub-users were only common in early-successional stands. For nine bird species we found significant relationships between their local abundance and forest structural el