1. Roads as a contributor to landscape-scale variation in bird communities
- Author
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Stuart E. Newson, Sophia C. Cooke, Alison Johnston, Paul F. Donald, Andrew Balmford, Cooke, Sophia C. [0000-0001-5179-4435], Johnston, Alison [0000-0001-8221-013X], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, University of St Andrews. Statistics, and Cooke, Sophia C [0000-0001-5179-4435]
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,QH301 Biology ,Science ,Population Dynamics ,Wildlife ,General Physics and Astronomy ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,QH301 ,Common species ,Abundance (ecology) ,Negatively associated ,Road networks ,Animals ,QA Mathematics ,QA ,lcsh:Science ,Relative species abundance ,Ecosystem ,Ecological modelling ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,Conservation biology ,Urbanization ,631/158/1144 ,food and beverages ,DAS ,General Chemistry ,Biodiversity ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,631/158/858 ,Urban ecology ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Scale variation ,631/158/672 ,lcsh:Q ,human activities ,631/158/670 - Abstract
Roads and their traffic can affect wildlife over large areas and, in regions with dense road networks, may influence a high proportion of the ecological landscape. We assess the abundance of 75 bird species in relation to roads across Great Britain. Of these, 77% vary significantly in abundance with increasing road exposure, just over half negatively so. The effect distances of these negative associations average 700 m from a road, covering over 70% of Great Britain and over 40% of the total area of terrestrial protected sites. Species with smaller national populations generally have lower relative abundance with increasing road exposure, whereas the opposite is true for more common species. Smaller-bodied and migratory species are also more negatively associated with road exposure. By creating environmental conditions that benefit generally common species at the expense of others, road networks may echo other anthropogenic disturbances in bringing about large-scale simplification of avian communities., Roads are widespread and can impact ecological communities. Cooke et al. use data for 75 bird species across Great Britain to show that common species are disproportionately abundant near roads, whereas rarer, smaller-bodied and migrant species are more likely to be negatively associated with roads.
- Published
- 2020