Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view

Short-term variability patterns among forest breeding bird assemblages were analysed on the basis of annually repeated mapping censuses conducted during 1985-1989 in several study plots in the Valdai Uplands, northwest Russia . For most species, there was no evidence that variability in breeding num...

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Main Author: Morozov, N. S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BirdLife Finland 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380
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spelling fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/133380 2023-09-05T13:22:01+02:00 Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view Morozov, N. S. 1993-12-31 application/pdf https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380 eng eng BirdLife Finland https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380/81926 https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380 Ornis Fennica; Vol 70 Nro 4 (1993); 177–188 Ornis Fennica; Vol. 70 No. 4 (1993); 177–188 0030-5685 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 1993 fttsvojs 2023-08-23T23:02:42Z Short-term variability patterns among forest breeding bird assemblages were analysed on the basis of annually repeated mapping censuses conducted during 1985-1989 in several study plots in the Valdai Uplands, northwest Russia . For most species, there was no evidence that variability in breeding numbers has been strongly limited by any mechanisms operating in the breeding grounds. Only in the Wood Warbler, in a birchdominated forest, did the number of territories vary less than could be explained by chance. When the data from a variety of forest habitats were pooled and analysed together, a prevalence of parallel density fluctuations among species was found. However, there were considerable interhabitat differences in fluctuation patterns . At the habitat level, the highest variability of total bird numbers, and the significant preponderance of parallel density fluctuations among species were found in the richest assemblage with the highest number of congeneric species (grey alder forest). Even secondary hole-nesters gave no indications of compensatory density fluctuations . There was little evidence of competitive density interactions at the assemblage level. Individualistic responses of species to environment, stochastic processes, predation pressure on the key species, and heterospecific attraction seem to be more important in determining bird assemblage variability and creating interhabitat differences in fluctuation patterns . Article in Journal/Newspaper Northwest Russia taiga Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
institution Open Polar
collection Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
op_collection_id fttsvojs
language English
description Short-term variability patterns among forest breeding bird assemblages were analysed on the basis of annually repeated mapping censuses conducted during 1985-1989 in several study plots in the Valdai Uplands, northwest Russia . For most species, there was no evidence that variability in breeding numbers has been strongly limited by any mechanisms operating in the breeding grounds. Only in the Wood Warbler, in a birchdominated forest, did the number of territories vary less than could be explained by chance. When the data from a variety of forest habitats were pooled and analysed together, a prevalence of parallel density fluctuations among species was found. However, there were considerable interhabitat differences in fluctuation patterns . At the habitat level, the highest variability of total bird numbers, and the significant preponderance of parallel density fluctuations among species were found in the richest assemblage with the highest number of congeneric species (grey alder forest). Even secondary hole-nesters gave no indications of compensatory density fluctuations . There was little evidence of competitive density interactions at the assemblage level. Individualistic responses of species to environment, stochastic processes, predation pressure on the key species, and heterospecific attraction seem to be more important in determining bird assemblage variability and creating interhabitat differences in fluctuation patterns .
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Morozov, N. S.
spellingShingle Morozov, N. S.
Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
author_facet Morozov, N. S.
author_sort Morozov, N. S.
title Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
title_short Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
title_full Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
title_fullStr Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
title_full_unstemmed Short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
title_sort short-term fluctuations in a south-taiga bird assemblage: support for an "individualistic" view
publisher BirdLife Finland
publishDate 1993
url https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380
genre Northwest Russia
taiga
genre_facet Northwest Russia
taiga
op_source Ornis Fennica; Vol 70 Nro 4 (1993); 177–188
Ornis Fennica; Vol. 70 No. 4 (1993); 177–188
0030-5685
op_relation https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380/81926
https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133380
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