Forest edges: Effects on vegetation, environmental gradients and local avian communities in the Sierra Juarez, Oaxaca, Mexico | | Posted on:2007-01-12 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Dissertation | | University:Indiana University | Candidate:Burcsu, Theresa Katherine | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:1443390005461041 | Subject:Biology | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | Edge effects are among the most serious threats to forest integrity because as global forest cover decreases overall, forest edge influence increases proportionally, driving habitat change and loss. Edge effects occur at the division between adjacent habitat types. Our understanding of edge effects comes mainly from tropical wet, temperate and boreal forests. Because forest structure in moisture-limited forests differs from wetter forest types, edge dynamics are likely to differ as well. Moreover, dry forests in the tropics have been nearly eliminated or exist only as forest fragments, making edge influence an important conservation and management concern for remaining dry forests. This study addresses this gap in the edge influence knowledge by examining created, regenerating edges associated with forest management in a seasonally dry pine-oak forest of Oaxaca, creating a new data point in edge effects research.; In this study I used Landsat TM imagery and a modified semivariance analysis to estimate the distance of edge influence for vegetation. I also used field methods to characterize forest structure and estimate edge influence on canopy and subcanopy vegetation. To finalize the project I extended the study to bird assemblages to identify responses and habitat preferences to local-scale changes associated with regenerating edges created by group-selection timber harvest.; Remote sensing analysis estimated that the distance of edge influence was 30-90 m from the edge. Vegetation analysis suggested that edge effects were weak relative to wetter forest types and that remote sensing data did not provide an estimate that was directly applicable to field-measured vegetative edge effects. The bird assemblages likewise responded weakly to habitat change associated with edge effect.; Open canopy structure, simple vertical stratigraphy, and topographic variation create forest conditions in which small openings do not create a high contrast to undisturbed forest. Thus, in this seasonally dry, open forest, vegetation and bird communities respond less to small openings than they do in wetter, more closed-canopy forests. Management practices and historical land-use interact and interfere with the detectability of edge influence in our study area. These results support hypotheses proposed for open forest types and suggest that patterns in edge influence in wet forest types may not be applicable to dry sites. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | Forest, Edge, Effects, Vegetation, Dry | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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