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The effects of habitat heterogeneity, as measured by satellite image texture, on tropical forest bird distributions.

Authors :
Suttidate, Naparat
Pidgeon, Anna M.
Hobi, Martina L.
Round, Philip D.
Dubinin, Maxim
Radeloff, Volker C.
Source :
Biological Conservation. May2023, Vol. 281, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Global biodiversity loss is most pronounced in the tropics. Monitoring of broad-scale patterns of habitat is essential for biodiversity conservation. Image texture measures derived from satellite data are proxies for habitat heterogeneity, but have not been tested in tropical forests. Our goal was to evaluate image texture to predict tropical forest bird distributions across Thailand for different guilds. We calculated a suite of texture measures from cumulative productivity (1-km fPAR-MODIS data) for Thailand's forests, and assessed how well texture measures predicted distributions of 86 tropical forest bird species in relation to body size, and nesting guild. Finally, we compared the predictive performance of combining (a) satellite image texture measures, (b) habitat composition, and (c) habitat fragmentation. We found that texture measures predicted occurrences of tropical forest birds well (AUC = 0.801 ± 0.063). Second-order homogeneity was the most predictive texture measure. Our models based on texture were significantly better for birds with larger body size (p < 0.05), but did not differ among nesting guilds (p > 0.05). Models that combined texture with habitat composition measures (AUC = 0.928 ± 0.038) outperformed models that combined fragmentation with habitat composition measures (AUC = 0.905 ± 0.047) (p < 0.05). The incorporation of texture, composition, and fragmentation variables significantly improved model accuracy over texture-only models (AUC = 0.801 ± 0.063 to AUC = 0.938 ± 0.034; p < 0.05). We suggest that texture measures are a valuable tool to predict bird distributions at broad scales in tropical forests. • Satellite image texture can be a proxy for habitat heterogeneity. • We found that image texture predicted tropic bird distributions well. • Second-order homogeneity had the highest predictive power. • Texture predicted large birds especially well. • Predicting species distributions with image texture can support conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00063207
Volume :
281
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biological Conservation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163002092
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110002