Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

TEMPORAL CHANGES IN VERTEBRATES DURING LANDSCAPE TRANSFORMATION: A LARGE‐SCALE “NATURAL EXPERIMENT”

View through CrossRef
Plantation development is a significant form of landscape change worldwide. We report findings from a large‐scale longitudinal natural experiment that quantified changes in Australian vertebrates as a former grazing landscape was transformed to one dominated by a radiata pine (Pinus radiata) plantation. The study included four main “treatments”: woodland remnants surrounded by emerging radiata pine (52 sites, termed “woodland treatments”), stands of radiata pine (10 sites, “pine controls”), woodland remnants where the surrounding landscape remained unchanged (56 sites, “woodland controls”), and paddocks with scattered woodland trees that surrounded the 56 woodland remnants (10 sites, “paddock controls”). In our study region, woodland is distinguished from forest by differences in tree height, tree spacing, bole length, and canopy development.Between 1998 and 2006, occupancy rates of “woodland treatments” by most mammals and reptiles increased linearly. Similar trends occurred in the “woodland controls,” suggesting that species had increased landscape‐wide, rather than displaying year × treatment interaction effects. We cross‐classified birds according to the statistical significance and nature of time trajectories. Groups included those that: (1) declined in woodland treatments in comparison with woodland controls, (2) decreased within woodland treatments but increased in woodland controls, (3) declined across the entire study area, (4) increased within woodland treatments in comparison with woodland controls, (5) increased within woodland treatments but declined in woodland controls, and (6) increased across the entire study area.Attributes of woodland treatments significantly associated with temporal changes in bird occupancy included: (1) age of surrounding pine stands; (2) number of boundaries with surrounding pines; (3) size of the woodland patches; (4) dominant vegetation type of woodland patches; and (5) temporal changes in vegetation structure in the woodland treatments.Bird species associated with open country and woodland environments were disadvantaged by landscape transformation, whereas those that benefited were forest taxa and/or habitat generalists capable of inhabiting pine stands and adjacent woodland patches. Beyond this generalization, an unanticipated finding was a lack of association between life history attributes and landscape transformation. We suggest that several key processes are likely drivers of change at multiple spatial scales. Recognition of such processes is important for conservation in landscapes transformed by plantation expansion.
Title: TEMPORAL CHANGES IN VERTEBRATES DURING LANDSCAPE TRANSFORMATION: A LARGE‐SCALE “NATURAL EXPERIMENT”
Description:
Plantation development is a significant form of landscape change worldwide.
We report findings from a large‐scale longitudinal natural experiment that quantified changes in Australian vertebrates as a former grazing landscape was transformed to one dominated by a radiata pine (Pinus radiata) plantation.
The study included four main “treatments”: woodland remnants surrounded by emerging radiata pine (52 sites, termed “woodland treatments”), stands of radiata pine (10 sites, “pine controls”), woodland remnants where the surrounding landscape remained unchanged (56 sites, “woodland controls”), and paddocks with scattered woodland trees that surrounded the 56 woodland remnants (10 sites, “paddock controls”).
In our study region, woodland is distinguished from forest by differences in tree height, tree spacing, bole length, and canopy development.
Between 1998 and 2006, occupancy rates of “woodland treatments” by most mammals and reptiles increased linearly.
Similar trends occurred in the “woodland controls,” suggesting that species had increased landscape‐wide, rather than displaying year × treatment interaction effects.
We cross‐classified birds according to the statistical significance and nature of time trajectories.
Groups included those that: (1) declined in woodland treatments in comparison with woodland controls, (2) decreased within woodland treatments but increased in woodland controls, (3) declined across the entire study area, (4) increased within woodland treatments in comparison with woodland controls, (5) increased within woodland treatments but declined in woodland controls, and (6) increased across the entire study area.
Attributes of woodland treatments significantly associated with temporal changes in bird occupancy included: (1) age of surrounding pine stands; (2) number of boundaries with surrounding pines; (3) size of the woodland patches; (4) dominant vegetation type of woodland patches; and (5) temporal changes in vegetation structure in the woodland treatments.
Bird species associated with open country and woodland environments were disadvantaged by landscape transformation, whereas those that benefited were forest taxa and/or habitat generalists capable of inhabiting pine stands and adjacent woodland patches.
Beyond this generalization, an unanticipated finding was a lack of association between life history attributes and landscape transformation.
We suggest that several key processes are likely drivers of change at multiple spatial scales.
Recognition of such processes is important for conservation in landscapes transformed by plantation expansion.

Related Results

Role of the Frontal Lobes in the Propagation of Mesial Temporal Lobe Seizures
Role of the Frontal Lobes in the Propagation of Mesial Temporal Lobe Seizures
Summary: The depth ictal electroencephalographic (EEG) propagation sequence accompanying 78 complex partial seizures of mesial temporal origin was reviewed in 24 patients (15 from...
GIS-based landscape design research
GIS-based landscape design research
Landscape design research is important for cultivating spatial intelligence in landscape architecture. This study explores GIS (geographic information systems) as a tool for landsc...
Regional Singularity
Regional Singularity
<p><b>Contemporary landscape architectural design has been defined by the recent focus on large-scale design, ‘landscape urbanism’, and the development of mapping techn...
URUTAN LOGIS DAN TEMPORAL DALAM NOVEL KUBAH KARYA AHMAD TOHARI (THE LOGICAL AND TEMPORAL PLOTS OF KUBAH NOVEL BY AHMAD TOHARI)
URUTAN LOGIS DAN TEMPORAL DALAM NOVEL KUBAH KARYA AHMAD TOHARI (THE LOGICAL AND TEMPORAL PLOTS OF KUBAH NOVEL BY AHMAD TOHARI)
AbstractThe Logical and Temporal Plots of Kubah Novel by Ahmad Tohari.‘Kubah’ is the firstnovel of Ahmad Tohari which tells life issues of Karman with the background of September30...
ANALISIS KETERKAITAN KEKERASAN DENGAN PERBUATAN CABUL TERHADAP ANAK
ANALISIS KETERKAITAN KEKERASAN DENGAN PERBUATAN CABUL TERHADAP ANAK
<span id="page3R_mcid85" class="markedContent"><em><span style="left: calc(var(--scale-factor)*85.10px); top: calc(var(--scale-factor)*399.05px); font-size: calc(var...
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision
This paper describes a generalized axiomatic scale-space theory that makes it possible to derive the notions of linear scale-space, affine Gaussian scale-space and linear spatio-te...
Genomic Novelty at the Vertebrate Ancestor
Genomic Novelty at the Vertebrate Ancestor
AbstractThe group of vertebrates includes diverse evolutionary lineages, and typical laboratory‐model vertebrates are confined to only limited groups (tetrapods and teleost fishes)...

Back to Top