Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland

Wet grassland birds world-wide face mounting threats due to habitat destruction especially in the Indo-Gangetic floodplains, where in addition to intense human use, primarily for agriculture, there is a paucity of baseline information to inform conservation and management. We examined the response o...

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Main Author: Jahan I.
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/89602
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spelling th-mahidol.896022023-09-11T01:01:41Z Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland Jahan I. Mahidol University Environmental Science Wet grassland birds world-wide face mounting threats due to habitat destruction especially in the Indo-Gangetic floodplains, where in addition to intense human use, primarily for agriculture, there is a paucity of baseline information to inform conservation and management. We examined the response of two co-occurring floodplain grassland specialists, the globally threatened Bristled Grassbird Schoenicola striatus (VU) and widespread but little-studied Striated Grassbird Megalurus palustris (LC), to habitat structure and human use in floodplain grassland at two sites, one on the lower Ganges River and one on the Brahmaputra River, Bangladesh through point counts combined with vegetation surveys. Responses from the breeding seasons of 2018 and 2019 were assessed by linear models and bird densities estimated using distance sampling. Results indicate that the occurrence of Bristled Grassbird increased with homogeneous tall Saccharum grass cover but decreased with increased crop cover, which may be the main driver of its decline. Striated Grassbird showed a more generalized pattern of positive association with tall grassland vegetation including taller crops and exotic plants, but was also positively associated with grass harvesting indicating its avoidance of homogeneous tall grassland. Although the density of Striated Grassbirds at the Brahmaputra site was 3–4 times greater than that of Bristled Grassbird, it was nearly absent from the Ganges site, revealing previously unappreciated micro-habitat preferences. Comparison with a more common species provided a clearer understanding of habitat and human influences on the more threatened grassbird. Long-term conservation of Bristled Grassbird requires careful management of grass harvesting and cattle grazing. 2023-09-10T18:01:41Z 2023-09-10T18:01:41Z 2023-01-01 Article Wetlands Ecology and Management (2023) 10.1007/s11273-023-09948-x 15729834 09234861 2-s2.0-85169104040 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/89602 SCOPUS
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Environmental Science
spellingShingle Environmental Science
Jahan I.
Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
description Wet grassland birds world-wide face mounting threats due to habitat destruction especially in the Indo-Gangetic floodplains, where in addition to intense human use, primarily for agriculture, there is a paucity of baseline information to inform conservation and management. We examined the response of two co-occurring floodplain grassland specialists, the globally threatened Bristled Grassbird Schoenicola striatus (VU) and widespread but little-studied Striated Grassbird Megalurus palustris (LC), to habitat structure and human use in floodplain grassland at two sites, one on the lower Ganges River and one on the Brahmaputra River, Bangladesh through point counts combined with vegetation surveys. Responses from the breeding seasons of 2018 and 2019 were assessed by linear models and bird densities estimated using distance sampling. Results indicate that the occurrence of Bristled Grassbird increased with homogeneous tall Saccharum grass cover but decreased with increased crop cover, which may be the main driver of its decline. Striated Grassbird showed a more generalized pattern of positive association with tall grassland vegetation including taller crops and exotic plants, but was also positively associated with grass harvesting indicating its avoidance of homogeneous tall grassland. Although the density of Striated Grassbirds at the Brahmaputra site was 3–4 times greater than that of Bristled Grassbird, it was nearly absent from the Ganges site, revealing previously unappreciated micro-habitat preferences. Comparison with a more common species provided a clearer understanding of habitat and human influences on the more threatened grassbird. Long-term conservation of Bristled Grassbird requires careful management of grass harvesting and cattle grazing.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Jahan I.
format Article
author Jahan I.
author_sort Jahan I.
title Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
title_short Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
title_full Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
title_fullStr Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
title_full_unstemmed Differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two Grassbirds (Fam. Locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
title_sort differential responses to habitat structure and degradation by two grassbirds (fam. locustellidae) syntopic in floodplain grassland
publishDate 2023
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/89602
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