Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills

<p>Despite intense publicity, habitat loss still remains a serious threat to biodiversity. Forest destruction is its frontrunner, both in terms of physical habitat under threat and potential for biodiversity loss. In the fragmented landscape of the Taita Hills, SE Kenya, several bird species...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Githiru, M, Mwangi Githiru
Other Authors: Lens, L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
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author Githiru, M
Mwangi Githiru
author2 Lens, L
author_facet Lens, L
Githiru, M
Mwangi Githiru
author_sort Githiru, M
collection OXFORD
description <p>Despite intense publicity, habitat loss still remains a serious threat to biodiversity. Forest destruction is its frontrunner, both in terms of physical habitat under threat and potential for biodiversity loss. In the fragmented landscape of the Taita Hills, SE Kenya, several bird species are facing the threat of extinction from forest loss. They are absent from many of the remnant forest patches and/or are showing negative effects with increasing disturbance. Using a relatively common forest-dependent bird species - the whitestarred robin <em>Pogonocichla stellata</em> - as a model, the current status of this ecosystem was examined, and future patterns predicted in view of the unrelenting destruction. As expected, the robin population in the largest and most intact fragment (<em>c</em>35 ha) was the healthiest, suggesting that this was indeed the best quality habitat patch: it had the highest population density, highest productivity (low nest predation and high juvenile to adult ratio) and lowest turnover rates. Effects of forest deterioration were evident from the fact that the medium-sized patch (<em>c</em>95 ha), which is undergoing severe degradation, was a worse habitat for the robin than the tiny patches (<em>c</em>2-8 ha): it had the lowest population density, lowest productivity (highest nest predation rates and lowest juvenile to adult ratio), and highest turnover rates. The explanation for this is twofold. Besides the smallest patches facing lower levels of habitat loss recently, they also had high levels of dispersal between them. They occasionally operated as a finegrained system with individuals moving between them in the space of a few days. In general, the robin metapopulation is demographically (rate of change, λ = 0.996) and genetically (at migration- and mutation-drift equilibrium) stable at present. The populations in the largest and smallest patches were potential sources providing emigrants that were possibly crucial in sustaining the population in the medium-sized patch (given its low productivity and high turnover rates). Overall, these findings underscore the importance of within-patch processes, both for ensuring persistence of subpopulations and providing dispersers, as well as between-patch processes (chiefly dispersal) for ensuring metapopulation persistence. Thus, by furnishing ample sample sizes that enabled work to be carried out in all fragments throughout this landscape, the model species approach was useful for identifying the need for a two-pronged conservation strategy. First, a need to focus within fragments to reduce habitat loss and degradation, and second, to address among fragment issues relating to land-use and maintaining a forested landscape, in order to enhance connectivity between patches. Finally, based on the mechanisms by which disturbance and fragmentation are affecting bird populations e.g. predator influxes from the surrounding matrix, conservation recommendations for the Taita Hills are offered.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:b532599f-8f75-4a11-95d5-61a5afee1fca2022-03-27T04:31:41ZEndemic forest birds of the Taita HillsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:b532599f-8f75-4a11-95d5-61a5afee1fcaForest birdsTaita HillsKenyaFragmented landscapesEnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project2002Githiru, MMwangi GithiruLens, LCresswell, WPerrins, C<p>Despite intense publicity, habitat loss still remains a serious threat to biodiversity. Forest destruction is its frontrunner, both in terms of physical habitat under threat and potential for biodiversity loss. In the fragmented landscape of the Taita Hills, SE Kenya, several bird species are facing the threat of extinction from forest loss. They are absent from many of the remnant forest patches and/or are showing negative effects with increasing disturbance. Using a relatively common forest-dependent bird species - the whitestarred robin <em>Pogonocichla stellata</em> - as a model, the current status of this ecosystem was examined, and future patterns predicted in view of the unrelenting destruction. As expected, the robin population in the largest and most intact fragment (<em>c</em>35 ha) was the healthiest, suggesting that this was indeed the best quality habitat patch: it had the highest population density, highest productivity (low nest predation and high juvenile to adult ratio) and lowest turnover rates. Effects of forest deterioration were evident from the fact that the medium-sized patch (<em>c</em>95 ha), which is undergoing severe degradation, was a worse habitat for the robin than the tiny patches (<em>c</em>2-8 ha): it had the lowest population density, lowest productivity (highest nest predation rates and lowest juvenile to adult ratio), and highest turnover rates. The explanation for this is twofold. Besides the smallest patches facing lower levels of habitat loss recently, they also had high levels of dispersal between them. They occasionally operated as a finegrained system with individuals moving between them in the space of a few days. In general, the robin metapopulation is demographically (rate of change, λ = 0.996) and genetically (at migration- and mutation-drift equilibrium) stable at present. The populations in the largest and smallest patches were potential sources providing emigrants that were possibly crucial in sustaining the population in the medium-sized patch (given its low productivity and high turnover rates). Overall, these findings underscore the importance of within-patch processes, both for ensuring persistence of subpopulations and providing dispersers, as well as between-patch processes (chiefly dispersal) for ensuring metapopulation persistence. Thus, by furnishing ample sample sizes that enabled work to be carried out in all fragments throughout this landscape, the model species approach was useful for identifying the need for a two-pronged conservation strategy. First, a need to focus within fragments to reduce habitat loss and degradation, and second, to address among fragment issues relating to land-use and maintaining a forested landscape, in order to enhance connectivity between patches. Finally, based on the mechanisms by which disturbance and fragmentation are affecting bird populations e.g. predator influxes from the surrounding matrix, conservation recommendations for the Taita Hills are offered.</p>
spellingShingle Forest birds
Taita Hills
Kenya
Fragmented landscapes
Githiru, M
Mwangi Githiru
Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills
title Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills
title_full Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills
title_fullStr Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills
title_full_unstemmed Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills
title_short Endemic forest birds of the Taita Hills
title_sort endemic forest birds of the taita hills
topic Forest birds
Taita Hills
Kenya
Fragmented landscapes
work_keys_str_mv AT githirum endemicforestbirdsofthetaitahills
AT mwangigithiru endemicforestbirdsofthetaitahills