Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation

There is widespread concern for many understorey and ground-dwelling bird species in the Philippines that appear intolerant of forest alteration. We present density estimates for 18 key bird species in old growth forest, advanced and early secondary growth and active cultivation within the Puerto Pr...

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Main Authors: Mallari, Neil Aldrin D., Collar, Nigel J., Lee, David C., McGowan, Philip J.K., Wilkinson, Roger, Marsden, Stuart J.
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Published: Animo Repository 2024
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12214
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-112442023-05-17T06:34:26Z Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation Mallari, Neil Aldrin D. Collar, Nigel J. Lee, David C. McGowan, Philip J.K. Wilkinson, Roger Marsden, Stuart J. There is widespread concern for many understorey and ground-dwelling bird species in the Philippines that appear intolerant of forest alteration. We present density estimates for 18 key bird species in old growth forest, advanced and early secondary growth and active cultivation within the Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park in Palawan. Six species were not recorded in cultivation and the abundance of these and several others increased along the successional gradient from cultivation to old growth forest. Eleven species, including five endemics and three of four threatened species, had highest density estimates in old growth forest. However, several species had high density estimates in the heavily disturbed habitats and every habitat type held highest densities of at least one of the bird species. The commonest habitat association across the bird community was a preference for areas containing large trees, indicating the importance of retention of such trees in allowing suitable ground and understorey microhabitats to persist. Old growth forests have the highest conservation value for Palawan’s endemic birds and, while some species thrive in the anthropogenic habitats that occur within the Park, the present extent of cultivation and associated successional stages within its boundaries should not be increased. We caution against extrapolation of the abundance figures from the Park to the whole island but we suggest that population sizes for the threatened species are likely to be much greater than previously thought. We urge authorities to strengthen management within the protected area network in Palawan to ensure survival of key species. 2024-05-20T10:03:55Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12214 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Biology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Biology
spellingShingle Biology
Mallari, Neil Aldrin D.
Collar, Nigel J.
Lee, David C.
McGowan, Philip J.K.
Wilkinson, Roger
Marsden, Stuart J.
Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation
description There is widespread concern for many understorey and ground-dwelling bird species in the Philippines that appear intolerant of forest alteration. We present density estimates for 18 key bird species in old growth forest, advanced and early secondary growth and active cultivation within the Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park in Palawan. Six species were not recorded in cultivation and the abundance of these and several others increased along the successional gradient from cultivation to old growth forest. Eleven species, including five endemics and three of four threatened species, had highest density estimates in old growth forest. However, several species had high density estimates in the heavily disturbed habitats and every habitat type held highest densities of at least one of the bird species. The commonest habitat association across the bird community was a preference for areas containing large trees, indicating the importance of retention of such trees in allowing suitable ground and understorey microhabitats to persist. Old growth forests have the highest conservation value for Palawan’s endemic birds and, while some species thrive in the anthropogenic habitats that occur within the Park, the present extent of cultivation and associated successional stages within its boundaries should not be increased. We caution against extrapolation of the abundance figures from the Park to the whole island but we suggest that population sizes for the threatened species are likely to be much greater than previously thought. We urge authorities to strengthen management within the protected area network in Palawan to ensure survival of key species.
format text
author Mallari, Neil Aldrin D.
Collar, Nigel J.
Lee, David C.
McGowan, Philip J.K.
Wilkinson, Roger
Marsden, Stuart J.
author_facet Mallari, Neil Aldrin D.
Collar, Nigel J.
Lee, David C.
McGowan, Philip J.K.
Wilkinson, Roger
Marsden, Stuart J.
author_sort Mallari, Neil Aldrin D.
title Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation
title_short Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation
title_full Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation
title_fullStr Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation
title_full_unstemmed Population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in Palawan, Philippines: Implications for conservation
title_sort population densities of understorey birds across a habitat gradient in palawan, philippines: implications for conservation
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2024
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12214
_version_ 1800918937371672576