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Surviving urbanisation : maintaining bird species diversity in urban Melbourne

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by John WhiteJohn White, James FitzsimonsJames Fitzsimons, Grant Palmer, Mark Antos
The relationships between vegetation and bird communities within an urban landscape are synthetised, based on a series of studies we conducted. Our studies indicate that streetscape vegetation plays an important role in
influencing urban bird communities, with streetscapes dominated by native plants supporting communities with high native species richness and abundance, while exotic and newly-developed streetscapes support more introduced bird species and fewer native bird species. Native streetscapes can also provide important resources for certain groups of birds, such as nectarivores. Our research has also revealed that urban remnants are likely to support more native bird species if they are larger and if they contain components of riparian vegetation. Vegetation structure and quality does not appear to be as important a driver as remnant size in determining the richness of native bird communities. Introduced birds were shown to occur in remnants at low densities, irrespective of remnant size, when compared to densities found in streetscapes dominated by exotic vegetation. We discuss our results in terms of practical planning and management options to increase and maintain urban avian diversity and conclude by offering suggestions for future fields of research in terms of urban bird communities.

History

Journal

Victorian naturalist

Volume

126

Issue

3

Pagination

73 - 78

Publisher

The Field Naturalists Club of Victoria

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0042-5184

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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