Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11667/126
Appears in Collections:University of Stirling Research Data
Title: Dataset for 'Connectivity with primary forest determines the value of secondary tropical forests for bird conservation'
Creator(s): Mayhew, Rebekah J
Contact Email: rebekah.j.mayhew@gmail.com
Keywords: bird communities
community structure
conservation
landscape management
land-use change
tropical extinction crisis
secondary forest
Panama
Date Available: 22-Jan-2019
Citation: Mayhew, RJ (2019): Dataset for 'Connectivity with primary forest determines the value of secondary tropical forests for bird conservation'. University of Stirling. Faculty of Natural Sciences. Dataset. http://hdl.handle.net/11667/126
Publisher: Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Stirling
Dataset Description (Abstract): Predicted species extinctions caused by the destruction and degradation of tropical primary forest may be at least partially mitigated by the expansion of regenerating secondary forest. However, the conservation value of secondary forest remains controversial, and potentially underestimated, since most previous studies have focused on young, single-aged, or isolated stands. Here we use point count surveys to compare tropical forest bird communities in 20–120-yr-old secondary forest and primary forest stands in central Panama, with varying connectivity between secondary forest sites and extensive primary forest. We found that species richness and other metrics of ecological diversity, as well as the combined population density of all birds, reached a peak in younger (20-yr-old) secondary forests, and appeared to decline in older secondary forest stands. This counter-intuitive result can be explained by the greater connectivity between younger secondary forests and extensive primary forests at our study site, compared with older secondary forests that are either (1) more isolated, or (2) connected to primary forests that are themselves small and isolated. Our results suggest that connectivity with extensive primary forest is a more important determinant of avian species richness and community structure than forest age, and highlight the vital contribution secondary forests can make in conserving tropical bird diversity, so long as extensive primary habitats are adjacent and spatially connected.
Dataset Description (TOC): Mayhew et al._Panama Bird Data_20190105.csv - dataset to accompany manuscript 'Connectivity with primary forest determines the value of secondary tropical forests for bird conservation'.
Type: dataset
Contract/Grant Title: Structure, function and resilience of avian communities in tropical ecosystems
Funder(s): NERC - Natural Environment Research Council
Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland
Gilchrist Educational Trust
Contract/Grant Number: NE/I028068/1
Geographic Location(s): Panama
Neotropics
Central America
Time Period: 2014-2016
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11667/126
Rights: Rights covered by the standard CC-BY 4.0 licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Affiliation(s) of Dataset Creator(s): University of Stirling (Biological and Environmental Sciences)

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Mayhew et al._Panama Bird Data_20190105.csv2.96 MB.CSVView/Open


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