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Bioacoustic analyses reveal that bird communities recover with forest succession in tropical dry forests

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dc.contributor.author Owen, Kiirsti C.
dc.contributor.author Melin, Amanda D.
dc.contributor.author Campos, Fernando A.
dc.contributor.author Fedigan, Linda M.
dc.contributor.author Gillespie, Thomas W.
dc.contributor.author Mennill, Daniel J.
dc.date.accessioned 2026-06-01T21:03:57Z
dc.date.available 2026-06-01T21:03:57Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.citation Owen, K. C. et al. (2020). Bioacoustic analyses reveal that bird communities recover with forest succession in tropical dry forests. Avian Conservation and Ecology. https://doi.org/10.5751/ace-01615-150125
dc.identifier.issn 1712-6568
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.5751/ace-01615-150125
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11606/2264
dc.description.abstract With expanding anthropogenic disturbances to forests around the world, forest restoration is increasingly important for bird conservation. Restoration monitoring is critical for understanding how birds respond to forest regeneration and for assessing the effectiveness of restoration efforts. Using bioacoustic monitoring, we recorded bird communities during both dry and wet seasons at 62 sites along a chronosequence of tropical dry forests in the Área de Conservación Guanacaste in Costa Rica. Tropical dry forests rank among the globe’s most imperiled ecosystems, adding special urgency to their restoration and accompanying restoration monitoring. We found that bird species diversity, richness, and abundance increase with measures of forest maturity. Our results show that bird communities in regenerating areas become more similar to those of undisturbed areas as forests mature. This suggests that bird communities are recovering to predisturbed conditions in regenerating sites, and that maturing tropical dry forests are home to an increasingly diverse and abundant community of birds. We conducted an additional assessment, by sampling 30 locations using point-counts that were originally surveyed 23 years ago. We found that species richness and abundance were similar across this 23-year interval, although bird community composition changed because several forest-specialist species were only detected in the later period
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Resilience Alliance, Inc.
dc.relation.ispartof Avian Conservation and Ecology
dc.subject bioacoustics
dc.subject biodiversity
dc.subject bird species recovery
dc.subject community composition
dc.subject conservation
dc.subject forest restoration
dc.subject neotropical bird communities
dc.subject passive acoustic monitoring
dc.subject tropical dry forest
dc.title Bioacoustic analyses reveal that bird communities recover with forest succession in tropical dry forests
dc.type Article


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    Artículos de Acceso Abierto y Manuscritos de Investigadores entregados a ACG

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