The importance of residual habitats and crop management for the conservation of birds breeding in intensive orchards
Corresponding Author
Mattia Brambilla
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Fondazione Lombardia per l'Ambiente, Settore Biodiversità e Aree protette, Largo 10 luglio 1976 1, Seveso, MB, 20822 Italy
Tel.: +39 02 80616123, [email protected]Search for more papers by this authorGiacomo Assandri
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e dell'Ambiente, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Via Adolfo Ferrata 9, Pavia, 27100 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorGiuseppe Martino
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorGiuseppe Bogliani
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e dell'Ambiente, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Via Adolfo Ferrata 9, Pavia, 27100 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorPaolo Pedrini
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorCorresponding Author
Mattia Brambilla
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Fondazione Lombardia per l'Ambiente, Settore Biodiversità e Aree protette, Largo 10 luglio 1976 1, Seveso, MB, 20822 Italy
Tel.: +39 02 80616123, [email protected]Search for more papers by this authorGiacomo Assandri
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e dell'Ambiente, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Via Adolfo Ferrata 9, Pavia, 27100 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorGiuseppe Martino
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorGiuseppe Bogliani
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e dell'Ambiente, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Via Adolfo Ferrata 9, Pavia, 27100 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorPaolo Pedrini
Museo delle Scienze, Sezione Zoologia dei Vertebrati, Corso della Scienza e del Lavoro 3, Trento, 38123 Italy
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
Intensive orchards are artificial habitats managed according to production criteria, but they may mimic open woodlands and harbour wild species. We investigated the effect of orchard features on the true abundance (estimated with occupancy models) of some bird species widespread in orchards. Our study was carried out in Val di Non (Trento province, Italy) where apple cultivation is the most widespread and intensive. We counted blackcaps Sylvia atricapilla, chaffinches Fringilla coelebs, and greenfinches Carduelis chloris three times at 44 transects 300-m long. At each transect, we estimated the number of territories/pairs and recorded variables describing the cover of the habitats and management factors. Blackcap abundance was positively affected by the cover of shrubland and broadleaved woodland and by a low cover of coniferous forests. Chaffinch abundance was driven by a negative impact of anti-hail nets and secondarily by bare ground and urbanized areas, with chaffinches more abundant in areas with grassland ground cover and 5–10 % cover of urban habitats. Greenfinch abundance increased with wetland cover, cover of other natural/semi-natural habitats and tree height and decreased with grassland cover. Both the availability of natural and semi-natural vegetation and the orchard traits determined by management can significantly affect the abundance of common species. The conservation of the remaining patches of woodland, shrubland, wetland (and other natural/semi-natural habitats) is essential for bird conservation. The already reported negative impact of anti-hail nets and the importance of the height of apple trees are confirmed; irrigation systems and bare ground may also be important factors.
References
- Anonymous (2013) Disciplinare per la produzione integrata—melo, susino e actinidia. IASMA Notizie 4: 1–15
- Arlettaz R, Schaub M, Fournier J, Reichlin TS, Sierro A, Watson JE, Braunisch V (2010) From publications to public actions: when conservation biologists bridge the gap between research and implementation. Bioscience 60: 835–842
- Arnold TW (2010) Uninformative parameters and model selection using Akaike's information criterion. J Wildl Manag 74: 1175–1178
- Bailey D, Schmidt-Entling M-H, Eberhart P, Herrmann J-D, Hofer G, Kormann U, Herzog F (2010) Effects of habitat amount and isolation on biodiversity in fragmented traditional orchards. J Appl Ecol 47: 1003–1013
- Balmford A, Green R, Phalan B (2012) What conservationists need to know about farming. Proc R Soc Lond B 279: 2714–2724
- Barrett GW, Ford HA, Recher HF (1994) Conservation of woodland birds in a fragmented rural landscape. Pac Conserv Biol 1: 245–256
10.1071/PC940245 Google Scholar
- Bartoń K (2014) MuMIn: multi-model inference. R package version 1.10.0. http://cran.r-project.org/package=MuMIn. Accessed 4 Nov 2014
- Benton TG, Vickery JA, Wilson JD (2003) Farmland biodiversity: is habitat heterogeneity the key? Trends Ecol Evol 18: 182–188
- Bouvier J, Ricci B, Agerberg J, Lavigne C (2011) Apple orchard pest control strategies affect bird communities in southeastern France. Environ Toxicol Chem 30: 212–219
- Brambilla M, Gobbi M (2014) A century of chasing the ice: delayed colonisation of ice-free sites by ground beetles along glacier forelands in the Alps. Ecography 37: 33–42
- Brambilla M, Pedrini P (2012) MElA: Monitoraggio EcoLogico dell'Avifauna nidificante. Museo delle Scienze and APOT, Trento
- Brambilla M, Casale F, Bergero V, Crovetto GM, Falco R, Negri I, Siccardi P, Bogliani G (2009) GIS-models work well, but are not enough: habitat preferences of Lanius collurio at multiple levels and conservation implications. Biol Conserv 142: 2033–2042
- Brambilla M, Fulco E, Gustin M, Celada C (2013a) Habitat preferences of the threatened Black-eared Wheatear Oenanthe hispanica in southern Italy. Bird Study 60: 432–435
- Brambilla M, Martino G, Pedrini P (2013b) Changes in song thrush Turdus philomelos density and habitat association in apple orchards during the breeding season. Ardeola 60: 73–83
- Brambilla M, Casale F, Falco R, Bergero V, Bocchi S, Maggi M, Crovetto GM (2014a) Aree Agricole Ad Alto Valore Naturale in Lombardia (2011–2013). Relazione tecnica. Fondazione Lombardia per l'Ambiente, Milano
- Brambilla M, Celada C, Gustin M (2014b) Setting favourable habitat reference values for breeding birds: general principles and examples for passerine birds. Bird Conserv Int 24: 263–271
- Chiron F, Chargé R, Julliard R, Jiguet F, Muratet A (2014) Pesticide doses, landscape structure and their relative effects on farmland birds. Agr Ecosyst Environ 185: 153–160
- Cooper T, Arblaster K, Baldock D, Farmer M, Beaufoy G, Jones G, Pou X, McCracken D, Bignal E, Elbersen B, Washer D, Angelstam P, Roberge JM, Pointereau P, Seffer J, Galvanek D (2007) Final report for the study on HNV indicators for evaluation. Institute for European Environmental Policy, London
- Donald PF, Green RE, Heath MF (2001) Agricultural intensification and the collapse of Europe's farmland bird populations. Proc R Soc Lond B 268: 25–29
- Elith J, Leathwick J (2007) Predicting species distributions from museum and herbarium records using multiresponse models fitted with multivariate adaptive regression splines. Divers Distrib 13: 265–275
- Elliott GP, Wilson PR, Taylor RH, Beggs JR (2010) Declines in common, widespread native birds in a mature temperate forest. Biol Conserv 143: 2119–2126
- Ficetola GF, Marziali L, Rossaro B, De Bernardi F, Padoa-Schioppa E (2011) Landscape-stream interactions and habitat conservation for amphibians. Ecol Appl 21: 1272–1282
- Fiske I, Chandler R (2011) Unmarked: an R package for fitting hierarchical models of wildlife occurrence and abundance. J Stat Softw 43: 1–23
- Friedman JH (1991) Multivariate adaptive regression splines. Ann Stat 19: 1–67
- Gaston KJ, Fuller RA (2008) Commonness, population depletion and conservation biology. Trends Ecol Evol 23: 14–19
- Genghini M, Gellini S, Gustin M (2006) Organic and integrated agriculture: the effects on bird communities in orchard farms in northern Italy. Biodiv Conserv 15: 3077–3094
- Gregory RD, van Strien A, Vorisek P, Meyling AWG, Noble DG, Foppen RPB, Gibbons DW (2005) Developing indicators for European birds. Philos Trans B 360: 269–288
- Hastie T, Tibshirani R, Friedman J (2009) The elements of statistical learning: data mining, inference, and prediction. Springer, New York
10.1007/978-0-387-84858-7 Google Scholar
- Heinanen S, von Numers M (2009) Modelling species distribution in complex environments: an evaluation of predictive ability and reliability in five shorebird species. Divers Distrib 15: 266–279
- Herzog F (1998) Streuobst: a traditional agroforestry system as a model for agroforestry development in temperate Europe. Agroforest Syst 42: 61–80
- Horak J, Peltanova A, Podavkova A, Safarova L, Boguschf P, Romportl D, Zasadilca P (2013) Biodiversity responses to land use in traditional fruit orchards of arural agricultural landscape. Agr Ecosyst Environ 178: 71–77
- Jedlikowski J, Brambilla M, Suska-Malawska M (2014) Fine-scale selection of nesting habitat in Little Crake Porzana parva and Water Rail Rallus aquaticus in small ponds. Bird Study 61: 171–181
- Jones GA, Sieving KE, Jacobson SK (2005) Avian diversity and functional insectivory on North-Central Florida farmlands. Conserv Biol 19: 1234–1245
- Leathwick JR, Rowe D, Richardson J, Elith J, Hastie T (2005) Using multivariate adaptive regression splines to predict the distributions of New Zealand's freshwater diadromous fish. Freshw Biol 50: 2034–2052
- Mac Nally R, Fleishman E, Thomson JR, Dobkin DS (2008) Use of guilds for modelling avian responses to vegetation in the Intermountain West (USA). Global Ecol Biogeogr 17: 758–769
- MacLeod CJ, Blackwell G, Benge J (2012) Reduced pesticide toxicity and increased woody vegetation cover account for enhanced native bird densities in organic orchards. J Appl Ecol 49: 652–660
- Marini L, Quaranta M, Fontana P, Biesmeijer JC, Bommarco R (2012) Landscape context and elevation affect pollinator communities in intensive apple orchards. Basic Appl Ecol 13: 681–689
- Mermod M, Reichlin TS, Arlettaz R, Schaub M (2009) The importance of ant-rich habitats for the persistence of the Wryneck Jynx torquilla on farmland. Ibis 151: 731–742
- Merow C, Smith MJ, Silander JA Jr (2013) A practical guide to MaxEnt for modeling species' distributions: what it does, and why inputs and settings matter. Ecography 36: 1058–1069
- Milborrow S (2011) Package ‘earth’ 3.2–1. Multivariate adaptive regression spline models. http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/earth. Accessed 4 Nov 2014
- Milborrow S (2011) Plotmo: Plot a model's response while varying the values of the predictors. http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/plotmo. Accessed 4 Nov 2014
- Mols CMM, Visser ME (2002) Great tits can reduce caterpillar damage in apple orchards. J Appl Ecol 39: 888–899
- Mols CMM, van Noordwijk AJ, Visser ME (2005) Assessing the reduction of caterpillar numbers by great tits Parus major breeding in apple orchards. Ardea 93: 259–269
- Myczko L, Rosin ZM, Skòrka P, WylegaŁa P, Tobolka M, Fliszkiewicz M, Mizera T, Tryjanowski P (2013) Effects of management intensity and orchard features on bird communities in winter. Ecol Res 28: 503–512
- O'Brien JM, Thorne JH, Rosenzweig ML, Shapiro AM (2011) Once-yearly sampling for the detection of trends in biodiversity: the case of Willow Slough, California. Biol Conserv 144: 2012–2019
- R Development Core Team (2013) R: a language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna
- Rete Rurale Nazionale and LIPU (2014) Uccelli comuni in Italia. Aggiornamento degli andamenti di popolazione e del Farmland Bird Index per la Rete Rurale Nazionale dal 2000 al 2013. http://www.reterurale.it/farmlandbirdindex. Accessed 4 Nov 2014
- Richards SA (2008) Dealing with overdispersed count data in applied ecology. J Appl Ecol 45: 218–227
- Royle JA (2004) N-mixture models for estimating population size from spatially replicated counts. Biometrics 60: 108–115
- Royle JA, Dorazio RM (2008) Hierarchical modeling and inference in ecology. Academic Press, New york
- Schaub M, Martinez N, Tagmann-Ioset A, Weisshaupt N, Maurer ML, Reichlin TS, Abadi F, Zbinden N, Jenni L, Arlettaz R (2010) Patches of bare ground as a staple commodity for declining ground-foraging insectivorous farmland birds. PLoS One 5: e13115
- Simon S, Bouvier JC, Debras JF, Sauphanor B (2010) Biodiversity and pest management in orchard systems. A review. Agron Sustain Dev 30: 139–152
- Tagmann-Ioset A, Schaub M, Reichlin TS, Weisshaupt N, Arlettaz R (2012) Bare ground as a crucial habitat feature for a rare terrestrially foraging farmland bird of Central Europe. Acta Oecol 39: 25–32
- Tucker GM, Evans MI (1997) Habitats for birds in Europe: a conservation strategy for the wider environment. Birdlife International, Cambridge
- Vickery J, Arlettaz R (2012) The importance of habitat heterogeneity at multiple scales for birds in European agricultural landscapes. In: RJ Fuller (ed) Birds and habitat. Relationships in changing landscapes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
10.1017/CBO9781139021654.009 Google Scholar
- Watson JC, Wolf AT, Ascher JS (2011) Forested landscapes promote richness and abundance of native bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila) in Wisconsin apple orchards. Environ Entomol 40: 621–632
- Weisshaupt N, Arlettaz R, Reichlin TS, Tagmann-Ioset A, Schaub M (2011) Habitat selection by foraging Wrynecks Jynx torquilla during the breeding season: identifying the optimal habitat profile. Bird Study 58: 111–119
- Wiącek J, Polak M (2008) Bird community breeding in apple orchards of Central Poland in relation to some habitat and management features. Pol J Environ Stud 17: 951–956