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Pacific Conservation Biology Pacific Conservation Biology Society
A journal dedicated to conservation and wildlife management in the Pacific region.
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Changes in woodland bird communities as replanted woodland matures

S. J. S. Debus A D , W. K. Martin B and J. M. Lemon C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Division of Zoology, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.

B PO Box 4034, West Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia.

C JML Environmental Consultants Pty Ltd, 9127 Kamilaroi Highway, Gunnedah, NSW 2380, Australia.

D Corresponding author. Email: sdebus@une.edu.au

Pacific Conservation Biology 23(4) 359-371 https://doi.org/10.1071/PC16028
Submitted: 4 July 2016  Accepted: 21 September 2017   Published: 23 October 2017

Abstract

Small patches of woodland were progressively established on degraded agricultural land near Gunnedah, northern New South Wales, on the heavily cleared Liverpool Plains. Birds were resurveyed in the plantings, and in agricultural fields (cropping and pasture) and remnant woodland, in 2011–12, 10 years after initial surveys in 2000–01. The plantings in the later survey were 60, 18, 16 and 13 years old, with a shrub layer included in the three youngest cohorts. The survey sites (total 14 ha planted, all within 200 m of remnant woodland) were paired 1-ha plots in each vegetation category. Birds were surveyed by 30-min area searches of each plot eight times over all seasons, using the same plots, procedure and observer as before. In all, 73 species were recorded in the later survey (versus 72 in the earlier survey), for a total of 87 species over both survey periods, with 58 species in 2011–12 (versus 54 in 2000–01) in the plantings; eight of 15 new species visited or colonised the maturing plantings. Avian species richness and abundance increased from the cleared agricultural plots through the progressively older plantings to resemble those in the remnant woodland. Between the first and second surveys, bird communities in the younger plantings converged with those in the older plantings and woodland. The nectar-feeding, foliage-feeding and ground-feeding insectivore guilds benefitted most, having increased in frequency in, or moved into, the younger cohorts of plantings (>13 years old), or both. Several threatened and other declining woodland birds visited, increased in or colonised the plantings. However, noisy miners (Manorina melanocephala) progressively occupied a few plots and excluded some other birds.

Additional keywords: ecological plantings, foraging guilds, threatened woodland birds


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