Birds in the matrix: the role of agriculture in avian conservation in the Taita Hills,Kenya |
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Authors: | Olivia Norfolk Martin Jung Philip J. Platts Phillista Malaki Dickens Odeny Robert Marchant |
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Affiliation: | 1. York Institute for Tropical Ecosystems, Environment Department, University of York, York, U.K;2. Department of Life Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, U.K;3. School of Life Science, University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K;4. Department of Biology, University of York, York, U.K;5. Zoology Department, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya;6. Centre for Biodiversity, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya |
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Abstract: | Agricultural conversion of tropical forests is a major driver of biodiversity loss. Slowing rates of deforestation is a conservation priority, but it is also useful to consider how species diversity is retained across the agricultural matrix. Here, we assess how bird diversity varies in relation to land use in the Taita Hills, Kenya. We used point counts to survey birds along a land‐use gradient that included primary forest, secondary vegetation, agroforest, timber plantation and cropland. We found that the agricultural matrix supports an abundant and diverse bird community with high levels of species turnover, but that forest specialists are confined predominantly to primary forest, with the matrix dominated by forest visitors. Ordination analyses showed that representation of forest specialists decreases with distance from primary forest. With the exception of forest generalists, bird abundance and diversity are lowest in timber plantations. Contrary to expectation, we found feeding guilds at similar abundances in all land‐use types. We conclude that whilst the agricultural matrix, and agroforest in particular, makes a strong contribution to observed bird diversity at the landscape scale, intact primary forest is essential for maintaining this diversity, especially amongst species of conservation concern. |
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Keywords: | agroforestry Eastern Arc Mountains forest functional diversity land‐use change tropical |
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