The Belding's yellowthroat (Geothlypis beldingi) is an endemic species of Baja California Sur confined to the edge vegetation of freshwater at several oases. Information on its current status, distribution and habitat selection, and an analysis of the human-related threats that the species faces at 10 oases are given here. Belding's yellowthroats have disappeared from three historical sites, Santiago, Miraflores and El Triunfo, where they were recorded in the early 1900s. Belding's yellowthroats forage mainly in reed grass and cattails in all oases and were never recorded > 50 m outside the edge vegetation of the water. The main threats we detected to their habitat were cutting of reed grass for rural home construction, burning vegetation, opening trails to the water for cattle, overgrazing of reed grass by horses and burros, and using up the water for agricultural and tourism purposes. Although local populations of the species seem to be common, they are vulnerable because the distribution of the species in southern Baja California is patchy. Populations are in general small and isolated, the bird has habitat-specific requirements, and human-related activity is putting pressure on the habitat of this endemic species. A Multidimensional Scaling Analysis showed that southern populations are likely to be more severely affected than northern ones.
Abstract:Habitat heterogeneity is an important ecological determinant of species richness. We evaluated the diversity within bird feeding guilds as related to habitat heterogeneity and land-use cover in a human-modified tropical landscape. To quantify this process, fine-scale bird census and habitat heterogeneity data were collected for a bird community in a 22.5-km2fragmented landscape in southern Mexico. Land-use cover data derived from field surveys were used to calculate habitat heterogeneity index values and the extent of each land-use cover type in 239 grid cells of 300 × 300 m. Bird diversity values were obtained based on 1195 point-counts in these cells. Product-moment correlations and linear regression analyses were used to evaluate the relationship between bird-guild diversity values and habitat heterogeneity. A total of 109 resident bird species grouped in six feeding guilds were recorded: insectivores (42%), frugivores (21%), granivores (17%), nectarivores (9%), omnivores (8%) and carnivores (3%). Diversity values for the entire bird community were significantly positively related to habitat heterogeneity, but feeding guilds showed contrasting responses to habitat heterogeneity and the amount of land-use cover: insectivores and frugivores were more diverse and abundant in secondary forests than in any other land-cover. Our findings illustrate the importance of small landscape fragments as potential key refuges for the most diverse and specialized feeding guilds, such as granivores and insectivores.
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