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1 August 2011 One-Sided Edge Responses in Forest Birds Following Restoration Treatments
James Battin, Thomas D. Sisk
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Abstract

We studied the effects of the edge between two forest types on the probability of occurrence of seven species of birds and found that four responded to the edge on only one side. Over 4 years, we measured the responses of forest birds to the edge between ponderosa pine forest undergoing restoration and neighboring untreated stands. Of the seven species analyzed, one occurred most frequently near the edge. Of the remaining six, none responded to the edge in the treated forest, but four responded in the untreated forest. Relatively few studies have examined abundance changes on both sides of an edge between distinct habitats that support similar bird communities, and predictive models of edge effects used for mapping animal responses to habitat change often assume that animal abundance will change on both sides of this sort of edge, declining near the edge in the habitat in which the species is most abundant and increasing near the edge in the habitat in which the species is less abundant. One-sided edge effects, such as those we have documented, may lead to markedly different predictions of the effects of habitat change on bird abundance in heterogeneous landscapes.

© 2011 by The Cooper Ornithological Society. All rights reserved. Please direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions website, http://www.ucpressjournals.com/reprintInfo.asp.
James Battin and Thomas D. Sisk "One-Sided Edge Responses in Forest Birds Following Restoration Treatments," The Condor 113(3), 501-510, (1 August 2011). https://doi.org/10.1525/cond.2011.100036
Received: 22 February 2010; Accepted: 1 February 2011; Published: 1 August 2011
KEYWORDS
edge effects
mixed model logistic regression
ponderosa pine forest
predictive model
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