2016
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12415
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Occupancy dynamics in human‐modified landscapes in a tropical island: implications for conservation design

Abstract: AimAvian communities in human-modified landscapes exhibit varying patterns of local colonization and extinction rates, determinants of species occurrence. Our objective was to model these processes to identify habitat features that might enable movements and account for occupancy patterns in habitat matrices between the Guanica and Susua forest reserves. This knowledge is central to conservation design, particularly in ever changing insular landscapes. LocationSouth-western Puerto Rico. MethodsWe used a multis… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This sets the background for further analyses of bird-habitat relationships at multiple spatial scales, particularly of species that are of ecological and conservation importance. Opportunities for future research include comparisons of multiple land uses with protected reserves, as well as examining spatial dynamics (such as local extinction, colonization, turnover and change in occupancy) over time (Janowski et al, 2012;Irizarry et al, 2016). This requires establishing long-term monitoring studies of bird communities in the region.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This sets the background for further analyses of bird-habitat relationships at multiple spatial scales, particularly of species that are of ecological and conservation importance. Opportunities for future research include comparisons of multiple land uses with protected reserves, as well as examining spatial dynamics (such as local extinction, colonization, turnover and change in occupancy) over time (Janowski et al, 2012;Irizarry et al, 2016). This requires establishing long-term monitoring studies of bird communities in the region.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, there is a need to bring together diverse sources of data that reflect habitat and species dynamics to better understand residential effects on species persistence, extinction rates and distribution (Araújo and Williams, 2000;Araújo et al, 2008;Yackulic et al, 2015), to more effectively aide conservation design. This kind of work has been conducted for avian communities in lands surrounding state forests in Puerto Rico (Irizarry et al, 2016). Finally, it is equally important to understand how residential development alters ecosystem services provided by protected areas in tropical islands such as water supply, and climate regulation as well as whether these effects are increased or attenuated when housing units are vacant or occupied, a common scenario in regions with declining human population and expanding housing development.…”
Section: Implications For Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, some insular bird species have been shown to be able to overcome hazards and use human-disturbed habitats and related resources. In particular, synanthropic species have been shown to increase their abundances in highly disturbed areas, with an important number of species concentrating at intermediate-disturbance levels and in edge systems (Lugo et al 2012;Irizarry et al 2016;Titoko et al 2019). Furthermore, native vegetation on islands (e.g., mangroves and forests) do not only harbor important avian diversity but are often large-scale sources of diversity, mitigating some of the effects of human activities (Khimoun et al 2017;Wang et al 2017;Titoko et al 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%