Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil

As urban areas expand, some species of diurnal birds of prey occupy these habitats, and many establish viable populations. The objectives of this study were to: (1) survey the species of birds of prey in the urban area located in the interior of the São Paulo state, Brazil, (2) to ve...

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Main Authors: Rafael Martos-Martins, Reginaldo J. Donatelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2020-07-01
Series:Neotropical Biology and Conservation
Online Access:https://neotropical.pensoft.net/article/52251/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-fdfc33cb45194904bd729863dc04433e2020-11-25T03:29:25ZengPensoft PublishersNeotropical Biology and Conservation2236-37772020-07-0115324526510.3897/neotropical.15.e5225152251Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern BrazilRafael Martos-Martins0Reginaldo J. Donatelli1São Paulo State UniversitySão Paulo State University As urban areas expand, some species of diurnal birds of prey occupy these habitats, and many establish viable populations. The objectives of this study were to: (1) survey the species of birds of prey in the urban area located in the interior of the São Paulo state, Brazil, (2) to verify the proportion of generalist and specialist species in terms of habitat and diet, (3) determine the period that the species are more active during the time period of the point counts, and (4) to evaluate if there is a pattern of seasonality. Samples were collected monthly between October 2014 and September 2016 using the point counts method (four points; 4 hr duration each). We analyzed species richness, habitat and diet, number of contacts and frequency of occurrence, period of greatest activity, and seasonality. We recorded 19 species of birds of prey through 2555 contacts. Most of the registered species (61%) were habitat and diet generalists, and the same percentage of species classified as uncommon or rare. In relation to the period of greatest activity, falconids were more active in the first hour while accipitrids and cathartids were more active in the fourth hour. In addition, we did not observe a seasonal pattern in this community, but Gampsonyx swainsonii showed a seasonal trend. We verified that the urban area of the municipality of Pirajuí has a significant diversity of birds of prey, including specialist species of habitat and diet. This information obtained evidence the importance of urban environments for birds of prey and showed the ability of these species to use this environment. From our results, we suggest that future studies should evaluate the effects of urban areas of different sizes and degrees of urbanization on bird of prey communities. https://neotropical.pensoft.net/article/52251/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rafael Martos-Martins
Reginaldo J. Donatelli
spellingShingle Rafael Martos-Martins
Reginaldo J. Donatelli
Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil
Neotropical Biology and Conservation
author_facet Rafael Martos-Martins
Reginaldo J. Donatelli
author_sort Rafael Martos-Martins
title Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil
title_short Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil
title_full Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil
title_fullStr Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern Brazil
title_sort community of diurnal birds of prey in an urban area in southeastern brazil
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series Neotropical Biology and Conservation
issn 2236-3777
publishDate 2020-07-01
description As urban areas expand, some species of diurnal birds of prey occupy these habitats, and many establish viable populations. The objectives of this study were to: (1) survey the species of birds of prey in the urban area located in the interior of the São Paulo state, Brazil, (2) to verify the proportion of generalist and specialist species in terms of habitat and diet, (3) determine the period that the species are more active during the time period of the point counts, and (4) to evaluate if there is a pattern of seasonality. Samples were collected monthly between October 2014 and September 2016 using the point counts method (four points; 4 hr duration each). We analyzed species richness, habitat and diet, number of contacts and frequency of occurrence, period of greatest activity, and seasonality. We recorded 19 species of birds of prey through 2555 contacts. Most of the registered species (61%) were habitat and diet generalists, and the same percentage of species classified as uncommon or rare. In relation to the period of greatest activity, falconids were more active in the first hour while accipitrids and cathartids were more active in the fourth hour. In addition, we did not observe a seasonal pattern in this community, but Gampsonyx swainsonii showed a seasonal trend. We verified that the urban area of the municipality of Pirajuí has a significant diversity of birds of prey, including specialist species of habitat and diet. This information obtained evidence the importance of urban environments for birds of prey and showed the ability of these species to use this environment. From our results, we suggest that future studies should evaluate the effects of urban areas of different sizes and degrees of urbanization on bird of prey communities.
url https://neotropical.pensoft.net/article/52251/download/pdf/
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