Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas

The montane forest ecosystems of Western Himalayas are under severe anthropogenic pressure because of hydro-electric project (HEP) development. Several studies have highlighted downstream effects of HEP, but there is no information on the effects of HEP-building activities on upstream fauna. In part...

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Main Author: Jolli V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-08-01
Series:Vestnik Zoologii
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2017-0036
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spelling doaj-ee532263072c4bbdbd1723bc333f04372021-09-05T20:51:37ZengSciendoVestnik Zoologii2073-23332017-08-0151431132410.1515/vzoo-2017-0036vzoo-2017-0036Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western HimalayasJolli V.0Department of Environmental Studies, University of Delhi, New Delhi-110007, IndiaThe montane forest ecosystems of Western Himalayas are under severe anthropogenic pressure because of hydro-electric project (HEP) development. Several studies have highlighted downstream effects of HEP, but there is no information on the effects of HEP-building activities on upstream fauna. In particular, studies on upstream Himalayan montane ecosystems and fauna around dams are lacking. I investigated effects of dam-building activities on bird communities in Indian Western Himalayas. I studied the response of bird communities along a disturbance gradient with the aim to identify key factors influencing their distribution. I surveyed primary and secondary montane forests, agricultural lands, and dam-affected (disturbed) habitats. Response variables included total avifaunal and woodland species richness and abundance, which were estimated by point-count surveys. Explanatory variables included tree and shrub density, canopy cover, disturbance intensity, and elevation. Bird species richness was higher in undisturbed and lesser disturbed sites, lower in agricultural sites, and lowest in HEP-affected sites. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed that canopy cover, shrub density, and disturbance influenced species distribution; woodland birds significantly negatively responded to dam-building activities. Th e study has shown that dam-building activity has negatively affected montane birds. I propose that increasing shrub and tree cover in dam-disturbed sites would minimise losses of avian habitats.https://doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2017-0036habitat disturbancemontane birdsspecies richness and hydro-electric projectwestern himalayas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jolli V.
spellingShingle Jolli V.
Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas
Vestnik Zoologii
habitat disturbance
montane birds
species richness and hydro-electric project
western himalayas
author_facet Jolli V.
author_sort Jolli V.
title Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas
title_short Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas
title_full Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas
title_fullStr Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas
title_full_unstemmed Hydro Power Development and Its Impacts on the Habitats and Diversity of Montane Birds of Western Himalayas
title_sort hydro power development and its impacts on the habitats and diversity of montane birds of western himalayas
publisher Sciendo
series Vestnik Zoologii
issn 2073-2333
publishDate 2017-08-01
description The montane forest ecosystems of Western Himalayas are under severe anthropogenic pressure because of hydro-electric project (HEP) development. Several studies have highlighted downstream effects of HEP, but there is no information on the effects of HEP-building activities on upstream fauna. In particular, studies on upstream Himalayan montane ecosystems and fauna around dams are lacking. I investigated effects of dam-building activities on bird communities in Indian Western Himalayas. I studied the response of bird communities along a disturbance gradient with the aim to identify key factors influencing their distribution. I surveyed primary and secondary montane forests, agricultural lands, and dam-affected (disturbed) habitats. Response variables included total avifaunal and woodland species richness and abundance, which were estimated by point-count surveys. Explanatory variables included tree and shrub density, canopy cover, disturbance intensity, and elevation. Bird species richness was higher in undisturbed and lesser disturbed sites, lower in agricultural sites, and lowest in HEP-affected sites. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed that canopy cover, shrub density, and disturbance influenced species distribution; woodland birds significantly negatively responded to dam-building activities. Th e study has shown that dam-building activity has negatively affected montane birds. I propose that increasing shrub and tree cover in dam-disturbed sites would minimise losses of avian habitats.
topic habitat disturbance
montane birds
species richness and hydro-electric project
western himalayas
url https://doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2017-0036
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