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Thresholds, incidence functions, and species-specific cues : responses of woodland birds to landscape structure in south-eastern Australia

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posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Andrew Bennett, Jim Radford
Looking out from a vantage point across a large tract of forest gives a superficial impression of uniformity: the crowns of canopy trees follow the folds and contours of the landscape to provide a continuous cover of wooded vegetation. But this visual appearance belies the truth: forested landscapes are far from uniform. On closer examination, they comprise a complex mosaic of different vegetation types and and stands of different age-classes, differing structural features, and modified to a varying extent by human land-uses. Forests have a critical role in the conservation of biodiversity throughout the world (Peterken 1996; Laurance and Bierregard 1997; Lindenmayer and Franklin 2002) and a key feature contributing to their conservation value is the response of forest biota to the heterogeneity inherent in forested landscapes (Lindenmayer <i>et al. </i>2006). Consequently, an understanding of the implications of landscape structure for the maintainance of species and ecological processes is an important foundation for forest management and biodiversity conservation.

History

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2009, Cambridge University Press

Extent

18

Editor/Contributor(s)

M Villard, B Jonsson

Chapter number

8

Pagination

161 - 184

ISBN-13

9780521877091

ISBN-10

0521877091