Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah

Eight species of hornbill occur in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah. Hornbills are secondary cavity-nesting birds and one of the limiting factors to sustain their numbers is the availability of naturally-formed tree cavities. Past timber extraction has left behind highly degraded for...

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Main Authors: Kaur, Ravinder, Ramli, Rosli, Ancrenaz, Marc, Hassan, Nelson, Ahmad, Eddie, Ratag, Mahathir, Elahan, Berjaya, Sinyor, Hasbollah, Rajak, Abdul
Format: Article
Published: Oriental Bird Club 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/37056/
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spelling my.um.eprints.370562023-06-02T01:15:44Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/37056/ Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah Kaur, Ravinder Ramli, Rosli Ancrenaz, Marc Hassan, Nelson Ahmad, Eddie Ratag, Mahathir Elahan, Berjaya Sinyor, Hasbollah Rajak, Abdul QH301 Biology SD Forestry Eight species of hornbill occur in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah. Hornbills are secondary cavity-nesting birds and one of the limiting factors to sustain their numbers is the availability of naturally-formed tree cavities. Past timber extraction has left behind highly degraded forest patches without large emergent trees that usually provide suitable cavities for nesting hornbill pairs. Therefore, we conducted a study to assess how widespread this key resource is and to estimate the proportion of a forest patch currently occupied by potential nest trees, i.e. trees with cavities. In a 10 km(2) study site, eight trained observers systematically visited 30 250 m x 250 m plots and recorded tree cavities that appeared suitable for hornbills based on a pre-established list of criteria. Nineteen trees with cavities were located, measured and identified. We anticipated that cavities could go undetected by the observers; we therefore used a zero-inflated process occupancy model to address this measurement error and to analyse data obtained along transects. The observers detected trees with cavities in 10 out of 30 plots, translating into an observed proportion of roughly 33%. However, our model indicated that trees with cavities might actually occupy 25 out of 30 plots, i.e. 82% of the forest patch area. Our modelling approach incorporates imperfect detection through hierarchical modelling and constitutes a quick and cost-effective assessment tool that can be used to investigate the spatial presence of potential nest trees, an important resource for hornbills. Oriental Bird Club 2020 Article PeerReviewed Kaur, Ravinder and Ramli, Rosli and Ancrenaz, Marc and Hassan, Nelson and Ahmad, Eddie and Ratag, Mahathir and Elahan, Berjaya and Sinyor, Hasbollah and Rajak, Abdul (2020) Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah. Forktail (36). pp. 56-62. ISSN 0950-1746,
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic QH301 Biology
SD Forestry
spellingShingle QH301 Biology
SD Forestry
Kaur, Ravinder
Ramli, Rosli
Ancrenaz, Marc
Hassan, Nelson
Ahmad, Eddie
Ratag, Mahathir
Elahan, Berjaya
Sinyor, Hasbollah
Rajak, Abdul
Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah
description Eight species of hornbill occur in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah. Hornbills are secondary cavity-nesting birds and one of the limiting factors to sustain their numbers is the availability of naturally-formed tree cavities. Past timber extraction has left behind highly degraded forest patches without large emergent trees that usually provide suitable cavities for nesting hornbill pairs. Therefore, we conducted a study to assess how widespread this key resource is and to estimate the proportion of a forest patch currently occupied by potential nest trees, i.e. trees with cavities. In a 10 km(2) study site, eight trained observers systematically visited 30 250 m x 250 m plots and recorded tree cavities that appeared suitable for hornbills based on a pre-established list of criteria. Nineteen trees with cavities were located, measured and identified. We anticipated that cavities could go undetected by the observers; we therefore used a zero-inflated process occupancy model to address this measurement error and to analyse data obtained along transects. The observers detected trees with cavities in 10 out of 30 plots, translating into an observed proportion of roughly 33%. However, our model indicated that trees with cavities might actually occupy 25 out of 30 plots, i.e. 82% of the forest patch area. Our modelling approach incorporates imperfect detection through hierarchical modelling and constitutes a quick and cost-effective assessment tool that can be used to investigate the spatial presence of potential nest trees, an important resource for hornbills.
format Article
author Kaur, Ravinder
Ramli, Rosli
Ancrenaz, Marc
Hassan, Nelson
Ahmad, Eddie
Ratag, Mahathir
Elahan, Berjaya
Sinyor, Hasbollah
Rajak, Abdul
author_facet Kaur, Ravinder
Ramli, Rosli
Ancrenaz, Marc
Hassan, Nelson
Ahmad, Eddie
Ratag, Mahathir
Elahan, Berjaya
Sinyor, Hasbollah
Rajak, Abdul
author_sort Kaur, Ravinder
title Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah
title_short Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah
title_full Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah
title_fullStr Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah
title_full_unstemmed Estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in Kinabatangan, Sabah
title_sort estimating the availability of potential hornbill nest trees in a secondary forest patch in kinabatangan, sabah
publisher Oriental Bird Club
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/37056/
_version_ 1768007305836625920