Avian Communities of Mature Balsam Fir Forests in Newfoundland: Age-Dependence and Implications for Timber Harvesting
Author(s) -
Ian D. Thompson,
Holly A. Hogan,
William A. Montevecchi
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
ornithological applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.874
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1938-5129
pISSN - 0010-5422
DOI - 10.2307/1369994
Subject(s) - balsam , guild , old growth forest , geography , coarse woody debris , windthrow , ecology , abies balsamea , forestry , woodpecker , forest management , habitat , biology , horticulture
The amount of old growth balsam fir (Abies balsamea) forest (SO+ years) in\udNewfoundland, Canada has declined and management towards a 60.year rotation age will\udfurther reduce the availability of old forest as wildlife habitat. We distinguished among three\udmature age-classes of forests (40-59, 60-79, and 80+ years) based on tree density, canopy\udgaps, woody debris, and moss and litter cover on the ground. Canonical correspondence\udanalysis revealed two groups of stands: one containing all of the 40-year-old stands and\udmost 60-year-old stands, and a second that included old growth stands and 4 of 10 60-ycarold\udstands. Forest birds were separated into four groups: one preferring the youngest stands,\udanother observed primarily in old stands, and two others that were intermediate. Bird species\udrichness was greater in 40.year-old forests than in 60+ and 80+-year-old stands. Blackbacked\udWoodpecker (Picoides arcticus) and Gray-cheeked Thrush (Hylocichla minima) were most abundant in old forests. Six other species also were grouped together with the latter\udtwo as an old forest group. We observed more species and more total birds breeding on productive forest site types than on less-productive sites based on a forest ecosystem classification, and five species showed significant relationships between density and site quality.\udWe observed few relationships between stand age and migratory strategy. The only guild for which there was a significant relationship of abundance with forest age was cone seedcaters, which were more common in second-growth forests than in old forest. To maintain avian diversity in these forest landscapes, some stands must be allowed to develop as old growth
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