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首页> 外文期刊>Forest Ecology and Management >Avian population and community processes in forest ecosystems: long-term research in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest. (Special Issue: A commemoration of 100 years of avian research on USFS Experimental Forests.)
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Avian population and community processes in forest ecosystems: long-term research in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest. (Special Issue: A commemoration of 100 years of avian research on USFS Experimental Forests.)

机译:森林生态系统中的鸟类种群和群落过程:在哈伯德布鲁克实验林中进行的长期研究。 (特刊:纪念USFS实验森林的鸟类研究100年。)

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摘要

Long-term studies in relatively undisturbed forest ecosystems, such as occur in many of the USFS' Experimental Forests, provide valuable insight into bird population and community processes, information pertinent to forest management and bird conservation. Major findings from 40 years of research in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in north-central New Hampshire reviewed here show that the distributions and abundances of bird species are dynamic, even within well-developed and mature forests, and that species respond differently to habitat (vegetation) structure, food availability, and other features of the forest environment. At the local scale, bird population demography is most affected by factors that influence fecundity and recruitment, mainly food availability, weather, nest predators, and density dependent processes. Fecundity is strongly correlated with subsequent recruitment and is critical for maintaining breeding population size. Events in the non-breeding season, however, also influence the abundance and demography of breeding populations, indicating the need to assess factors operating throughout the species' annual cycle. At the landscape scale, populations in temperate forests are spatially structured by each species' response to habitat and environmental patterns, but also by social interactions such as competition and conspecific attraction. Settlement patterns and ultimately reproductive performance depend on habitat quality, based on vegetation structure, food availability and nest predator effects that vary across the landscape. Results from these long-term studies centered at Hubbard Brook provide a mechanistic understanding of avian population dynamics and community responses. The results provide a framework for predicting how future changes in habitat quality, climate, and other environmental threats may influence bird populations and communities in north-temperate forests.
机译:在USFS的许多实验森林中进行的相对未受干扰的森林生态系统的长期研究,为了解鸟类种群和群落过程,与森林管理和鸟类保护有关的信息提供了宝贵的见识。对新罕布什尔州中北部哈伯德布鲁克实验森林进行40年研究的主要发现在这里进行了审查,结果表明,即使在发达和成熟的森林中,鸟类物种的分布和数量也是动态的,并且物种对栖息地的反应也不同(植被),食物供应和森林环境的其他特征。在当地范围内,鸟类种群人口统计学受影响繁殖力和募集的因素影响最大,主要是食物供应,天气,巢中的掠食者和依赖密度的过程。繁殖力与随后的募集密切相关,对于维持繁殖种群的规模至关重要。但是,非育种季节的事件也会影响育种种群的数量和人口统计学,这表明需要评估在整个物种的年度循环中起作用的因素。在景观尺度上,温带森林的种群在空间结构上取决于每个物种对生境和环境模式的反应,还取决于社会相互作用(例如竞争和特定吸引)。定居方式和最终的繁殖性能取决于栖息地的质量,其取决于植被结构,食物的可利用性和巢穴捕食者的影响,这些效应在整个景观中都不同。这些长期研究的结果集中在哈伯德·布鲁克(Hubbard Brook),提供了对鸟类种群动态和社区反应的机械理解。结果为预测未来栖息地质量,气候和其他环境威胁的变化如何影响北温带森林的鸟类种群和群落提供了框架。

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