Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions

Exurban development is a prevalent cause of habitat loss and alteration throughout the globe and is a common land-use pattern in areas of high natural amenity value. We investigated the response of bird communities to exurban development in two contrasting North American regions, the Adirondack Park...

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Main Authors: Michale J. Glennon, Heidi E. Kretser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Diversity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/13/2/42
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spelling doaj-21fbe2f43d864000ae9eddeb31ffe2812021-01-23T00:04:20ZengMDPI AGDiversity1424-28182021-01-0113424210.3390/d13020042Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American RegionsMichale J. Glennon0Heidi E. Kretser1Paul Smith’s College Adirondack Watershed Institute, Paul Smiths, NY 12970, USAWildlife Conservation Society, Saranac Lake, NY 12983, USAExurban development is a prevalent cause of habitat loss and alteration throughout the globe and is a common land-use pattern in areas of high natural amenity value. We investigated the response of bird communities to exurban development in two contrasting North American regions, the Adirondack Park (New York) in the eastern US, and the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Montana) in the Rocky Mountain West. We combined social and ecological data collection methods to compare the effects of exurban development on avian communities between the two landscapes, and, in exurban residential areas within them, to compare the relative roles of habitat structure, resource provisioning, and human disturbance in influencing avian habitat use. Contrasting with an earlier pilot study, we found differential effects of exurban development in the two regions, with birds generally more responsive in the Adirondack Park. Characteristics of habitat context and structure had larger influences on bird habitat use than human-associated resource provisioning or disturbance in both landscapes. The smaller magnitude and high variability in the responses of birds to landowner stewardship and/or disturbance suggest that broader geographical factors are highly important and that careful siting of developments on the landscape may be more successful at protecting wildlife communities than attempts to influence the behaviors of their inhabitants once built.https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/13/2/42Adirondack Parkavian communityexurban developmentGreater Yellowstone Ecosystemhuman disturbancestewardship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michale J. Glennon
Heidi E. Kretser
spellingShingle Michale J. Glennon
Heidi E. Kretser
Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions
Diversity
Adirondack Park
avian community
exurban development
Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
human disturbance
stewardship
author_facet Michale J. Glennon
Heidi E. Kretser
author_sort Michale J. Glennon
title Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions
title_short Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions
title_full Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions
title_fullStr Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions
title_full_unstemmed Exurbia East and West: Responses of Bird Communities to Low Density Residential Development in two North American Regions
title_sort exurbia east and west: responses of bird communities to low density residential development in two north american regions
publisher MDPI AG
series Diversity
issn 1424-2818
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Exurban development is a prevalent cause of habitat loss and alteration throughout the globe and is a common land-use pattern in areas of high natural amenity value. We investigated the response of bird communities to exurban development in two contrasting North American regions, the Adirondack Park (New York) in the eastern US, and the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Montana) in the Rocky Mountain West. We combined social and ecological data collection methods to compare the effects of exurban development on avian communities between the two landscapes, and, in exurban residential areas within them, to compare the relative roles of habitat structure, resource provisioning, and human disturbance in influencing avian habitat use. Contrasting with an earlier pilot study, we found differential effects of exurban development in the two regions, with birds generally more responsive in the Adirondack Park. Characteristics of habitat context and structure had larger influences on bird habitat use than human-associated resource provisioning or disturbance in both landscapes. The smaller magnitude and high variability in the responses of birds to landowner stewardship and/or disturbance suggest that broader geographical factors are highly important and that careful siting of developments on the landscape may be more successful at protecting wildlife communities than attempts to influence the behaviors of their inhabitants once built.
topic Adirondack Park
avian community
exurban development
Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
human disturbance
stewardship
url https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/13/2/42
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