Loading...
Research Project
Untitled
Funder
Authors
Publications
Preserving wintering frugivorous birds in agro-ecosystems under land use change: Lessons from intensive and super-intensive olive orchards
Publication . Morgado, Rui; Pedroso, Rui; Porto, Miguel; Herrera, José M.; Rego, Francisco Castro; Moreira, Francisco; Beja, Pedro
1. Fleshy fruit production is becoming more intensive worldwide, but how this affects
frugivorous birds is poorly known. In the Mediterranean region, intensive
and super-intensive
olive orchards are fast expanding, potentially affecting millions
of wintering songbirds. Here, we test the idea that intensification may benefit
frugivorous birds, at least locally, due to increased fruit availability, while
negatively affecting the wider wintering bird community due to intensive management,
structural simplification and landscape homogenisation.
2. We estimated olive abundance and surveyed birds in early, mid-and
late winter,
at traditional, intensive and super-intensive
orchards in southern Portugal. We
used Hierarchical Modelling of Species Communities to relate species richness,
prevalence and abundance to management intensity, winter period, olive availability
and landscape context, and evaluated the role of frugivory in modulating
observed responses.
3. Olive availability was much higher throughout the winter in more intensive than in
traditional orchards, both in trees and on the ground. Frugivorous bird abundance
was higher in more intensive orchards, and the most abundant frugivorous species
(blackcap, song thrush, robin) were positively affected by olive availability and/or
increasing landscape cover by olive orchards, while intensification level had relatively
minor effects after accounting for other variables. Non-frugivorous
richness
and abundance were higher in traditional orchards, and many non-frugivorous
species had lower prevalence in more intensive orchards or were negatively affected
by landscapes dominated by olive cultivation.
4. Synthesis and applications. While negatively affecting the wider bird community,
our results suggest that olive farming intensification can contribute to sustaining
large numbers of frugivorous birds in the Mediterranean region. As frugivorous
birds are not seen as damaging by olive farmers, there is an opportunity to promote
their conservation in intensive and super-intensive
orchards, which requires management to increase habitat heterogeneity, and to reduce risks such as mortality
associated with mechanical harvest and contamination with pesticide residues.
Overall, we recommend that efforts to manage farmland biodiversity should consider
the impacts and conservation opportunities of fruit crop intensification
Organizational Units
Description
Keywords
Contributors
Funders
Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Funding programme
FARH
Funding Award Number
37347
