Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study

The necessity to restore rainforest habitats degraded by anthropogenic fires is widely recognized, however, research on restoration approaches has mainly centred on the recovery of forest structural complexity. There is insufficient evidence on the efficacy of restoration methods in the recovery of...

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Main Authors: Rurangwa, ML, Matthews, TJ, Niyigaba, P, Tobias, JA, Whittaker, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020
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author Rurangwa, ML
Matthews, TJ
Niyigaba, P
Tobias, JA
Whittaker, R
author_facet Rurangwa, ML
Matthews, TJ
Niyigaba, P
Tobias, JA
Whittaker, R
author_sort Rurangwa, ML
collection OXFORD
description The necessity to restore rainforest habitats degraded by anthropogenic fires is widely recognized, however, research on restoration approaches has mainly centred on the recovery of forest structural complexity. There is insufficient evidence on the efficacy of restoration methods in the recovery of the faunal diversity and features linked to key ecosystem functions. We assessed the taxonomic diversity and functional trait structure of bird assemblages in undisturbed primary forest and fire-affected habitats undergoing natural regeneration, as well as areas of assisted natural regeneration, in Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda. We compiled bird occurrence data from point-count sampling, and obtained morphological traits for all species in our assemblages using measurements taken from wild birds and museum specimens. We found marked differences in species composition between primary forest habitats and regenerating forest, with similarity increasing over time since perturbation. Taxonomic diversity was higher in primary forest, and similar between the two restoration approaches. Functional diversity was lower in assisted naturally regenerated habitats, although separate analyses within dietary guilds revealed no differences across habitats. Among desired restoration outcomes, tree species diversity was the leading positive driver of avian species diversity, fern coverage exerted negative effects, while canopy cover had a positive but weak influence. Our findings underscore the importance of preventing anthropogenic fires in tropical rainforest since their impacts on ecological processes are not easily reversed, as shown by the lack of improvement in avian diversity metrics under assisted naturally regeneration in relation to natural regeneration. We stress the need to document both floral and faunal recovery in order to aid informed decision-making on restoration methods.
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spelling oxford-uuid:93c45ffb-f385-47ea-81f1-3498b2969c0e2022-11-18T08:53:16ZAssessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case studyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:93c45ffb-f385-47ea-81f1-3498b2969c0eEnglishSymplectic ElementsElsevier2020Rurangwa, MLMatthews, TJNiyigaba, PTobias, JAWhittaker, RThe necessity to restore rainforest habitats degraded by anthropogenic fires is widely recognized, however, research on restoration approaches has mainly centred on the recovery of forest structural complexity. There is insufficient evidence on the efficacy of restoration methods in the recovery of the faunal diversity and features linked to key ecosystem functions. We assessed the taxonomic diversity and functional trait structure of bird assemblages in undisturbed primary forest and fire-affected habitats undergoing natural regeneration, as well as areas of assisted natural regeneration, in Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda. We compiled bird occurrence data from point-count sampling, and obtained morphological traits for all species in our assemblages using measurements taken from wild birds and museum specimens. We found marked differences in species composition between primary forest habitats and regenerating forest, with similarity increasing over time since perturbation. Taxonomic diversity was higher in primary forest, and similar between the two restoration approaches. Functional diversity was lower in assisted naturally regenerated habitats, although separate analyses within dietary guilds revealed no differences across habitats. Among desired restoration outcomes, tree species diversity was the leading positive driver of avian species diversity, fern coverage exerted negative effects, while canopy cover had a positive but weak influence. Our findings underscore the importance of preventing anthropogenic fires in tropical rainforest since their impacts on ecological processes are not easily reversed, as shown by the lack of improvement in avian diversity metrics under assisted naturally regeneration in relation to natural regeneration. We stress the need to document both floral and faunal recovery in order to aid informed decision-making on restoration methods.
spellingShingle Rurangwa, ML
Matthews, TJ
Niyigaba, P
Tobias, JA
Whittaker, R
Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study
title Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study
title_full Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study
title_fullStr Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study
title_full_unstemmed Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study
title_short Assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators: an Afrotropical case study
title_sort assessing tropical forest restoration after fire using birds as indicators an afrotropical case study
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