Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.

Vineyards are likely to be regionally important for wildlife, but we lack biodiversity studies in this agroecosystem which is undergoing a rapid management revolution. As vine cultivation is restricted to arid and warm climatic regions, biodiversity-friendly management would promote species typical...

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Main Authors: Claire Guyot, Raphaël Arlettaz, Pius Korner, Alain Jacot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5287466?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-99aed6912c724e2696b038df79330b6d2020-11-25T02:39:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01122e017017610.1371/journal.pone.0170176Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.Claire GuyotRaphaël ArlettazPius KornerAlain JacotVineyards are likely to be regionally important for wildlife, but we lack biodiversity studies in this agroecosystem which is undergoing a rapid management revolution. As vine cultivation is restricted to arid and warm climatic regions, biodiversity-friendly management would promote species typical of southern biomes. Vineyards are often intensively cultivated, mostly surrounded by few natural features and offering a fairly mineral appearance with little ground vegetation cover. Ground vegetation cover and composition may further strongly vary with respect to season, influencing patterns of habitat selection by ecological communities. We investigated season-specific bird-habitat associations to highlight the importance of semi-natural habitat features and vineyard ground vegetation cover throughout the year. Given that avian habitat selection varies according to taxa, guilds and spatial scale, we modelled bird-habitat associations in all months at two spatial scales using mixed effects regression models. At the landscape scale, birds were recorded along 10 1-km long transects in Southwestern Switzerland (February 2014 -January 2015). At the field scale, we compared the characteristics of visited and unvisited vineyard fields (hereafter called parcels). Bird abundance in vineyards tripled in winter compared to summer. Vineyards surrounded by a greater amount of hedges and small woods harboured higher bird abundance, species richness and diversity, especially during the winter season. Regarding ground vegetation, birds showed a season-specific habitat selection pattern, notably a marked preference for ground-vegetated parcels in winter and for intermediate vegetation cover in spring and summer. These season-specific preferences might be related to species-specific life histories: more insectivorous, ground-foraging species occur during the breeding season whereas granivores predominate in winter. These results highlight the importance of investigating habitat selection at different spatial scales and all along the annual cycle in order to draw practical, season-specific management recommendations for promoting avian biodiversity in farmland.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5287466?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claire Guyot
Raphaël Arlettaz
Pius Korner
Alain Jacot
spellingShingle Claire Guyot
Raphaël Arlettaz
Pius Korner
Alain Jacot
Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Claire Guyot
Raphaël Arlettaz
Pius Korner
Alain Jacot
author_sort Claire Guyot
title Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.
title_short Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.
title_full Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.
title_fullStr Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.
title_full_unstemmed Temporal and Spatial Scales Matter: Circannual Habitat Selection by Bird Communities in Vineyards.
title_sort temporal and spatial scales matter: circannual habitat selection by bird communities in vineyards.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Vineyards are likely to be regionally important for wildlife, but we lack biodiversity studies in this agroecosystem which is undergoing a rapid management revolution. As vine cultivation is restricted to arid and warm climatic regions, biodiversity-friendly management would promote species typical of southern biomes. Vineyards are often intensively cultivated, mostly surrounded by few natural features and offering a fairly mineral appearance with little ground vegetation cover. Ground vegetation cover and composition may further strongly vary with respect to season, influencing patterns of habitat selection by ecological communities. We investigated season-specific bird-habitat associations to highlight the importance of semi-natural habitat features and vineyard ground vegetation cover throughout the year. Given that avian habitat selection varies according to taxa, guilds and spatial scale, we modelled bird-habitat associations in all months at two spatial scales using mixed effects regression models. At the landscape scale, birds were recorded along 10 1-km long transects in Southwestern Switzerland (February 2014 -January 2015). At the field scale, we compared the characteristics of visited and unvisited vineyard fields (hereafter called parcels). Bird abundance in vineyards tripled in winter compared to summer. Vineyards surrounded by a greater amount of hedges and small woods harboured higher bird abundance, species richness and diversity, especially during the winter season. Regarding ground vegetation, birds showed a season-specific habitat selection pattern, notably a marked preference for ground-vegetated parcels in winter and for intermediate vegetation cover in spring and summer. These season-specific preferences might be related to species-specific life histories: more insectivorous, ground-foraging species occur during the breeding season whereas granivores predominate in winter. These results highlight the importance of investigating habitat selection at different spatial scales and all along the annual cycle in order to draw practical, season-specific management recommendations for promoting avian biodiversity in farmland.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5287466?pdf=render
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AT piuskorner temporalandspatialscalesmattercircannualhabitatselectionbybirdcommunitiesinvineyards
AT alainjacot temporalandspatialscalesmattercircannualhabitatselectionbybirdcommunitiesinvineyards
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