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17 January 2017 Influence of fire regime and other habitat factors on a eucalypt forest bird community in south-eastern Australia in the 1980s
Peter Smith, Judy Smith
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Abstract

We investigated bird habitat relationships in extensive eucalypt forest in the Blue Mountains, New South Wales, in 1986–87, assessing the importance of fire regime variables compared with other habitat variables. Our study sites encompassed a wide range of postfire ages, fire frequencies and fire severity, but we found no major bird community differences corresponding to differences in fire regime. The more common forest bird species appeared well adapted to fire regime variation in the 1980s. Tree canopy height was a far greater influence, with more species and more birds in taller forests (interpreted as a result of higher soil fertility leading to higher productivity of bird foods and greater structural complexity in taller forests). Other trends were fewer birds where there was a rainforest understorey under the eucalypts (reflecting the general scarcity of rainforest birds in the Blue Mountains), and more birds where nectar-rich flowers were more abundant (reflecting the abundance of nectarivorous birds in the Blue Mountains, especially over winter). The climate has changed since the 1980s and fires threaten to become much more severe, extensive and frequent. How these changes will impact on forest birds, and what management responses are required, is a critical area for further study.

© CSIRO 2016
Peter Smith and Judy Smith "Influence of fire regime and other habitat factors on a eucalypt forest bird community in south-eastern Australia in the 1980s," Australian Journal of Zoology 64(5), 312-326, (17 January 2017). https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO16053
Received: 2 August 2016; Accepted: 1 December 2016; Published: 17 January 2017
KEYWORDS
bird species richness
climate change
Fire frequency
Fire severity
nectarivorous birds
Time since fire
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