2012
DOI: 10.2478/s11756-012-0068-z
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Bird community structure in natural and urbanized habitats along an altitudinal gradient in Pauri district (Garhwal Himalaya) of Uttarakhand state, India

Abstract: In the Indian subcontinent there is hardly any study that compares the bird community structure of urban/suburban areas with those of forest habitat. The present survey identified diverse assemblages of birds in the Pauri district at different elevations. A total of 125 bird species belonging to 40 families including two least count species (Lophura leucomelanos and Pucrasia marcolopha) were recorded during this survey in the forest and urbanized habitats of Pauri District (Garhwal Hiamalaya) of Uttarakhand st… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…The current study concludes that avifaunal richness, diversity and composition are influenced by urbanization in Aligarh district as well consistent with the previous studies in India (Naithani and Bhatt, 2012;Sengupta et al, 2014;Kale et al, 2018;Pal et al, 2019). The low richness and diversity of birds in urban area as compared to the semiurban, semi-rural and rural-natural is in line with earlier studies across the globe (Blair, 1996;Marzluff, 2001;McKinney, 2002;Pauchard et al, 2006;McKinney, 2008;Garaffa et al, 2009;Naithani and Bhatt, 2012;Sengupta et al, 2013;Pal et al, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The current study concludes that avifaunal richness, diversity and composition are influenced by urbanization in Aligarh district as well consistent with the previous studies in India (Naithani and Bhatt, 2012;Sengupta et al, 2014;Kale et al, 2018;Pal et al, 2019). The low richness and diversity of birds in urban area as compared to the semiurban, semi-rural and rural-natural is in line with earlier studies across the globe (Blair, 1996;Marzluff, 2001;McKinney, 2002;Pauchard et al, 2006;McKinney, 2008;Garaffa et al, 2009;Naithani and Bhatt, 2012;Sengupta et al, 2013;Pal et al, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…India supports around 1300 species of avifauna accounting 13% of the world (Grimmet et al, 1998). Though India has experienced a rapid urbanization; 26.6% to 37%, between 1995(UN-Habitat, 2016), yet only scarce evidences existed on the effect of urbanization, restricted to some biogeographic zones such as Himalaya (Bhatt and Joshi, 2011;Naithani and Bhatt, 2012), coast (Sengupta et al, 2013;Kale et al, 2018) and Deccan plateau (Pal et al, 2019) and none in Gangetic plains. To fill the calculated by dividing total bird encounter at a point by the area covered.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(), 176 Doulton, Marsh, Newman, Bird, and Bell (), 177 Marsh, Lewis, Said, and Ewers (), 178 Miranda, Politi, and Rivera (), 179 Moreno‐Mateos et al. (), 180 Munyekenye, Mwangi, and Gichuki (), 181 Naidoo (), 182 Naithani and Bhatt (), 183 Naoe, Sakai, and Masaki (), 184 Ndang'ang'a, Njoroge, and Githiru (), 185 Neuschulz, Botzat, and Farwig (), 186 O'Dea and Whittaker (), 187 Owiunji and Plumptre (), 188 Pearman (), 189 Politi, Hunter Jr. and Rivera (), 190 Pons and Wendenburg (), 191 Ranganathan, Chan, and Daily (), 192 Ranganathan, Daniels, Chandran, Ehrlich, and Daily (), 193 Reid, Harris, and Zahawi (), 194 Rey‐Benayas, Galvan, and Carrascal (), 195 Reynolds and Symes (), 196 Rosselli (), 197 Sam, Koane, Jeppy, and Novotny (), 198 Santana, Porto, Gordinho, Reino, and Beja (), 199 Shahabuddin and Kumar (, ), 200 Sheldon, Styring, and Hosner (), 201 Sodhi et al. (), 202 Soh, Sodhi, and Lim (), 203 Sosa, Benz, Galea, and Poggio Herrero (), 204 Stouffer, Johnson, Bierregaard, Richard, and Lovejoy (), 205 Suarez‐Rubio and Thomlinson (), 206 Vergara and Simonetti (), 207 Verhulst, Báldi, and Kleijn (), 208 Waite, Closs, van Heezik, and Dickinson (), 209 Wang, Bao, Yu, Xu, and Ding (), 210 Wunderle, Henriques, and Willig (), 211 Li, Zou, Zhang, and Sheldon (), 212 Bates et al.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The wetlands of the Himalayan foothills have been chosen for ages by various species of migratory birds as suitable wintering and staging sites with ample foraging resources (Chatterjee et al 2017). Altitudinal gradients, varied forest types, and habitat heterogeneity support diversified flora and fauna at the foothills of the Himalayas, including rich avifauna (Mohan and Kumar 2010, Acharya et al 2011, Joshi et al 2012, Naithani and Bhatt 2012, Chatterjee et al 2020. Pandit et al (2007) cautioned that large-scale deforestation in the Indian Himalaya would lead to the extinction of endemic taxa, including the Himalayan foothills.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%