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Effects of an ENSO-related fire on birds of a lowland tropical forest in Sumatra
Authors:J.M. Adeney,J. R. Ginsberg,G. J. Russell,&   M. F. Kinnaird
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA;
Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA;
Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, NY, USA;
Department of Mathematical Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ, USA;
Department of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ, USA
Abstract:
Comparisons of bird community composition in burned and unburned areas of a lowland tropical rainforest in Sumatra, Indonesia indicated the following during the first 5 years after burning: (1) original burn severity strongly affected bird community composition at both the genus and family levels; (2) bird community composition continued to change progressively away from immediate post-burn composition in medium and severely burned forest as well as adjacent unburned forest; and (3) the degree of impact was both taxon and guild specific, with understory insectivores most detrimentally affected. Although species richness may temporarily increase in burned areas, this study suggests that multiple wildfires will lead to a decline in diversity over a large scale as birds of open fields replace interior forest specialists.
Keywords:avifauna    community change    conservation    disturbance    El Niño    fire ecology    guilds    Indonesia    insectivorous birds    rainforest    species loss    Southeast Asia    tropical forests    understory birds    wildlife
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