Abstract
Humans fragment landscapes to the detriment of wildlife. We review why fragmentation is detrimental to wildlife (especially birds), review the effects of urbanization on birds inhabiting nearby native habitats, suggest how restoration ecologists can minimize these effects, and discuss future research needs. We emphasize the importance of individual fitness to determining community composition. This means that reproduction, survivorship, and dispersal (not simply community composition) must be maintained, restored, and monitored. We suggest that the severity of the effects of fragmentation are determined by (1) the natural disturbance regime, (2) the similarity of the anthropogenic matrix to the natural matrix, and (3) the persistence of the anthropogenic change. As a result, urbanization is likely to produce greater effects of fragmentation than either agriculture or timber harvest. Restoration ecologists, land managers, and urban planners can help maintain native birds in fragmented landscapes by a combination of short- and long-term actions designed to restore ecological function (not just shape and structure) to fragments, including: (1) maintaining native vegetation, deadwood, and other nesting structures in the fragment, (2) managing the landscape surrounding the fragment (matrix), not just the fragment, (3) making the matrix more like the native habitat fragments, (4) increasing the foliage height diversity within fragments, (5) designing buffers that reduce penetration of undesirable agents from the matrix, (6) recognizing that human activity is not compatible with interior conditions, (7) actively managing mammal populations in fragments, (8) discouraging open lawn on public and private property, (9) providing statutory recognition of the value of complexes of small wetlands, (10) integrating urban parks into the native habitat system, (11) anticipating urbanization and seeking creative ways to increase native habitat and manage it collectively, (12) reducing the growing effects of urbanization on once remote natural areas, (13) realizing that fragments may be best suited to conserve only a few species, (14) developing monitoring programs that measure fitness, and (15) developing a new educational paradigm.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
Bibliography
Adams, L. W. 1994. Urban wildlife habitats: a landscape perspective. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.
Aronson, J., C. Floret, E. Le Floch, C. Ovalle, R. Pontanier. 1993. Restoration and rehabilitation of degraded ecosystems in arid and semi-arid lands. I. A view from the South. Restoration Ecology 1:8–17.
Askins, R. A. 1998. Restoring forest disturbances to sustain populations of shrubland birds. Restoration Management Notes 16:166–173.
Baker, F. A., S. E. Daniels, and C. A. Parks. 1996. Inoculating trees with wood decay fungi with rifle and shotgun. Western Journal of Applied Forestry 11:13–15.
Beissinger, S. R., and D. R. Osborne. 1982. Effects of urbanization on avian community organization. Condor 84:75–83.
Berger, J. 1993. Ecological restoration and nonindigenous species: a review. Restoration Ecology 1:74–82.
Berry, B. J. L. 1990. Urbanization. Pages 103–119 in B. L. Turner II, W. C Clark, R. W. Kates, J. F. Richards, J. T. Mathews, and W. B. Meyers, editors. The earth as transformed by human action. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Bezzel, E. 1985. Birdlife in intensively used rural and urban environments. Ornis Fennica 62:90–95.
Bierregaard, R. O, and T. E. Lovejoy. 1989. Effects of forest fragmentation on Amazonian understory bird communities. Acta Amazonica 19:215–241.
Bird, D. M., D. E. Varland, and J. J. Negro, editors. 1996. Raptors in human landscapes. Academic Press, London, United Kingdom.
Blair, R. B. 2001. Creating a homogeneous avifauna. Pages 459–486 in J. M. Marzluff, R. Bowman, and R. A. Donnelly, editors. Avian conservation and ecology in an urbanizing world. Kluwer Academic Press, Norwell, Massachusetts.
Bormann, F. H., D. Balmori, and G. T. Geballe. 1993. Redesigning the American lawn: a search for environmental harmony. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut.
Buechner, M., and R. Sauvajot. 1996. Conservation and zones of human activity: the spread of human disturbance across a protected landscape. Pages 605–629 in R. C Szaro and D. W. Johnston, editors. Biodiversity in managed landscapes. Oxford University Press, New York.
Bull, E. L., and A. D. Partridge. 1986. Methods of killing trees for use by cavity nesters. Wildlife Society Bulletin 14:142–146.
Coleman, J. S., and S. A. Temple. 1996. On the prowl. Wisconsin Natural Resources 20:4–8.
Conner, R. N., J. G. Dickson, and B. A. Locke. 1981. Herbicide-killed trees infected with fungi: potential cavity sites for woodpeckers. Wildlife Society Bulletin 94:308–310.
Crooks, K. R., and M. E. Soulé. 1999. Mesopredator release and avifaunal extinctions in a fragmented system. Nature 400:563–566.
Danielson, W. R., R. M. DeGraaf, and T. K. Fuller. 1997. Rural and suburban forest edges: effects on egg predators and nest predation rates. Landscape and Urban Planning 38:25–36.
Davis, A. M., and T. F. Glick. 1978. Urban ecosystems and island biogeography. Environmental Conservation 3:299–304.
DeGraaf, R. M., and P. Angelstam. 1993. Effects of timber size-class on predation of artificial nests in extensive forest. Forest Ecology and Management 61:127–136.
DeGraaf, R. M., and R. I. Miller, editors. 1996. Conservation of faunal diversity in forested landscapes. Chapman and Hall, London, United Kingdom.
DeSante, D. F., and D. K. Rosenberg. 1997. What do we need to monitor in order to manage landbirds? Pages 93–106 in J. M. Marzluff and R. Sallabanks, editors. Avian conservation: research and management. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
Diamond, J. M. 1989. The present, past and future of humancaused extinction. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 325:469–478.
Donnelly, R. E., and J. M. Marzluff. Designing research to advance the management of birds in urbanizing areas. In W. Shaw and L. Harris, editors. Proceedings of the Fourth International Urban Wildlife Conservation Symposium. 1–5 May 1999. Tucson, Arizona. University of Arizona, Tucson. (In press.)
Eden, S. F. 1985. The comparative breeding biology of magpies Pica pica in an urban and a rural habitat (Aves: Corvidae). Journal of Zoology, London. 205:325–334.
Emlen, J. T. 1974. An urban bird community in Tucson, Arizona: derivation, structure, regulation. Condor 76:184–197.
Erz, W. 1966. Ecological principles in the urbanization of birds. Ostrich Supplement 6:357–363.
Evans, B. 1998. Deadly towers. Living Bird 17:5.
Fahrig, L. 1999. Forest loss and fragmentation: which has the greater effect on persistence of forest-dwelling animals? Pages 87–95 in J. A. Rochelle, L. A. Lehmann, and J. Wisniewski, editors. Forest wildlife and fragmentation: management and implications. Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Fraissinet, M. 1989. Espansione della taccola, Corvus monedula, nei capoluoghi Italiani. Rivista Italiana Ornithologia 59:33–42.
Gavareski, C. A. 1976. Relation of park size and vegetation to urban bird populations in Seattle, Washington. Condor 78:375–382.
Gleason, H. A. 1926. The individualistic concept of the plant association. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 53:1–20.
Harris, L. D. 1984. The fragmented forest. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois.
Herkert, J. R. 1997. Nature preserves, natural areas, and the conservation of endangered and threatened species in Illinois. Pages 395–406 in M. W. Schwartz, editor. Conservation in highly fragmented landscapes. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Hindwood, K. A. 1940. The birds of Lord Howe Island. Emu 40:1–86.
Horn, D. J. 1985. Breeding birds of a central Ohio woodlot in response to succession and urbanization. Ohio Journal of Science 85:34–40.
Houghton, R. A. 1994. The worldwide extent of land-use change. BioScience 44:305–313.
Huxel, G. R., and A. Hastings. 1999. Habitat loss, fragmentation, and restoration. Restoration Ecology 7:309–315.
Jahrsdoerfer, S. E., and D. M. Leslie. 1988. Tamaulipan brushland of the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas: description, human impacts and management options. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Biological Report 88(36). U.S. Department of Interior, Washington, D.C.
Johnston, D. W., and T. P. Haines. 1958. Analysis of mass bird mortality in October, 1954. Auk 74:447–458.
Kerpez, T. A., and N. S. Smith. 1990. Competition between European Starlings and native woodpeckers for nest cavities in saguaros. Auk 107:367–375.
Knick, S. T., and J. T. Rotenberry. 1995. Landscape characteristics of fragmented shrubsteppe habitats and breeding passerine birds. Conservation Biology 9:1059.-1071..
Knight, R. L. 1990. Ecological principles applicable to the management of urban ecosystems. Pages 24–34 in E. A. Webb, and S. Q. Foster, editors. Perspectives in urban ecology. Denver Museum of Natural History and Thorne Ecological Institute, Denver, Colorado.
Knight, R. L., and K. J. Gutzweiller, editors. 1995. Wildlife and recreationists—coexistence through management and research. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
Knight, R. L., G. N. Wallace, and W. E. Riebsame. 1995. Ranching the view: subdivisions versus agriculture. Conservation Biology 9:459–461.
Konstantinov, V. M. 1996. Anthropogenic transformations of bird communities in the forest zone of the Russian Plain. Acta Ornithologica 31:53–58.
Lancaster, R. K., and W. E. Rees. 1979. Bird communities and the structure of urban habitats. Canadian Journal of Zoology 57:2358.-2368.
Laurance, W. F, and R. O. Bierregaard, Jr., editors. 1997. Tropical forest remnants: ecology, management, and conservation of fragmented communities. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois.
Lutz, F. E. 1921. Field book of insects, with special reference to those of north-eastern United States, aiming to answer common questions. G. P. Putnam, New York.
MacArthur, R. H., and J. MacArthur. 1961. On bird species diversity. Ecology 42:594–598.
Mankin, P. C., and R. E. Warner. 1997. Mammals of Illinois and the midwest: ecological and conservation issues for human-dominated landscapes. Pages 135–153 in M. W. Schwartz, editor. Conservation in highly fragmented landscapes. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Marshall, E., R. Haight, and F. R. Homans. 1998. Incorporating environmental uncertainty into species management decisions: Kirtland’s warbler habitat management as a case study. Conservation Biology 12:975–985.
Marzluff, J. M. 2001. Worldwide urbanization and its effects on birds. Pages 19–47 in J. M. Marzluff, R. Bowman, and R. A. Donnelly, editors. Avian conservation and ecology in an urbanizing world. Kluwer Academic Press, Norwell, Massachusetts.
Marzluff, J. M., R. B. Boone, and G. W. Cox. 1994. Historical changes in populations and perceptions of native pest bird species in the West. Studies in Avian Biology 15:202–220.
Marzluff, J. M., and N. Hamel. 2001. Land use issues. Pages. 659–673 in S. A. Levin, editor. Encyclopedia of biodiversity. Academic Press, San Diego, California.
Marzluff, J. M., F. R. Gehlbach, and D. A. Manuwal. 1998. Urban environments: influences on avifauna and challenges for the avian conservationist. Pages 283–299 in J. M. Marzluff and R. Sallabanks, editors. Avian conservation: research and management. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
Marzluff, J. M., M. G. Raphael, and R. Sallabanks. 2000. Understanding the effects of forest management on avian species. Wildlife Society Bulletin 28:1132–1143.
Marzluff, J. M, and M. Restani. 1999. The effects of forest fragmentation on avian nest predation. Pages 155–169 in J. A. Rochelle, L. A. Lehmann, and J. Wisniewski, editors. Forest wildlife and fragmentation: management and implications. Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Matthysen, E., and D. Currie. 1996. Habitat fragmentation reduces disperser success in juvenile nuthatches, Sitta europaea: evidence from patterns of territory establishment. Ecography 19:67–72.
McComb, W. C., and R. L. Rumsey. 1983. Characteristics and cavity nesting bird use of picloram-created snags in the Central Appalachians. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 7:34–37.
Meyer, W. B., and B. L. Turner, II. 1992. Human population growth and global landuse/cover change. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 23:39–61.
Mills, G. S., J. B. Dunning, and J. M. Bates. 1989. Effects of urbanization on breeding bird community structure in southwestern desert habitats. Condor 91:416–428.
Murphy, D. 1988. Challenges to biological biodiversity in urban areas. Pages 71–76 in E.O. Wilson, editor. Biodiversity. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C.
Newton, I. 1998. Bird conservation problems resulting from agricultural intensification in Europe. Pages 307–322 in J. M. Marzluff and R. Sallabanks, editors. Avian conservation: research and management. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
Nilon, C. H., C. N. Long, and W. C. Zipperer. 1995. Effects of wildland development on forest bird communities. Landscape and Urban Planning 32:81–92.
Pulliam, H. R. 1988. Sources, sinks, and population regulation. American Naturalist 132:652–661.
Robinson, S. K., J. D. Brawn, and J. P. Hoover. 1997. Effectiveness of small nature preserves for breeding birds. Pages 154–188 in M. W. Schwartz, editor. Conservation in highly fragmented landscapes. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Robinson, S. K, and D. S. Wilcove. 1994. Forest fragmentation in the temperate zone and its effects on migratory songbirds. Bird Conservation International 4:233–249.
Robinson, S. K., F. R. Thompson, III, T. M. Donovan, D. R. White-head, and J. Faaborg. 1995. Regional forest fragmentation and the nesting success of migratory birds. Science 267:1987–1990.
Rochelle, J. A., L. A. Lehmann, and J. Wisniewski, editors. 1999. Forest wildlife and fragmentation: management and implications. Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Rottenborn, S. C. 1999. Predicting the impacts of urbanization on riparian bird communities. Biological Conservation 88:289–299.
Sallabanks, R., P. J. Heglund, J. B. Haufler, B. A. Gilbert, and W. Wall. 1999. Forest fragmentation of the inland west: issues, definitions, and potential study approaches for forest birds. Pages 187–199 in J. A. Rochelle, L. A. Lehmann, and J. Wisniewski, editors. Forest wildlife and fragmentation: management and implications. Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Schuman, G. E., and S. E. Belden. 1991. Decomposition of wood residue amendments in revegetated bentonite spoils. Soil Science Society of America Journal 55:76–80.
Schwartz, M. W., and P. J. van Mantgem. 1997. The value of small preserves in chronically fragmented landscapes. Pages 379–394 in M. W. Schwartz, editor. Conservation in highly fragmented landscapes. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Shafer, C. L. 1997. Terrestrial nature reserve design at the urban/rural interface. Pages 345–378 in M. W. Schwartz, editor. Conservation in highly fragmented landscapes. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Soulé, M. E. 1991. Land use planning and wildlife maintenance. Journal of the American Planning Association 57:313–323.
Soulé, M. E., D. T. Bolger, A. C. Alberts, J. Wright, M. Sorice, and S. Hill. 1988. Reconstructed dynamics of rapid extinctions of chaparral-requiring birds in urban habitat islands. Conservation Biology 2:75–92.
Stearns, F., and P. Matthiae. 1997. The history of natural areas programs in Wisconsin. Pages 418–430 in M. W. Schwartz, editor. Conservation in highly fragmented landscapes. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Taylor, R. H. 1979. How the Macquarie Island parakeet became extinct. New Zealand Journal of Ecology 2:42–45.
Tewksbury, J. J., S. J. Hejl, and T. E. Martin. 1998. Breeding productivity does not decline with increasing fragmentation in a western landscape. Ecology 79:2890–2903.
Tilghman, N. G. 1987. Characteristics of urban woodlands affecting breeding bird diversity and abundance. Landscape and Urban Planning 14:481–495.
United Nations. 1996. World urbanization prospects: the 1996.revision. United Nations, New York.
van Horne, B. 1983. Density as a misleading indicator of habitat quality. Journal of Wildlife Management 47:893–901.
van Riper, C. III, S. G. van Riper, M. L. Goff, and M. Laird. 1986. The epizootiology and ecological significance of malaria in Hawaiian land birds. Ecological Monographs 56:327–344.
Villa, F., O. Rossi, and F. Sartore. 1992. Understanding the role of chronic environmental disturbance in the context of island biogeographical theory. Environmental Management 16:653–666.
Vitousek, P. M., P. R. Ehrlich, A. H. Ehrlich, and P. A. Matson. 1986. Human appropriation of the products of photosynthesis. Bioscience 36:368–373.
Vitousek, P. M., H. A. Mooney, J. Lubchenco, and J. M. Melillo. 1997. Human domination of the earth’s ecosystems. Science 277:494–499.
Wackernagel, M., and W. E. Rees. 1996. Our ecological footprint: reducing human impact on the earth. New Society Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Walters, J. R. 1998. The ecological basis of avian sensitivity to habitat fragmentation. Pages 181–192 in J. M. Marzluff and R. Sallabanks, editors. Avian conservation: research and management. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
Warner, R. E. 1985. Demography and movements of free-ranging domestic cats in rural Illinois. Journal of Wildlife Management 49:340–346.
Weller, M. W. 1994. Freshwater marshes: ecology and wildlife management. 3rd edition. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.
Wiens, J. A. 1989. The ecology of bird communities. Vol. II. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Wilcove, D. S. 1985. Nest predation in forest tracts and the decline of migratory songbirds. Ecology 66:1211–1214.
Wood, M. 1989. Soil biology. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Wuerthner, G. 1994. Subdivisions versus agriculture. Conservation Biology 8:905–908.
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2008 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Marzluff, J.M., Ewing, K. (2008). Restoration of Fragmented Landscapes for the Conservation of Birds: A General Framework and Specific Recommendations for Urbanizing Landscapes. In: Marzluff, J.M., et al. Urban Ecology. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73412-5_48
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73412-5_48
Publisher Name: Springer, Boston, MA
Print ISBN: 978-0-387-73411-8
Online ISBN: 978-0-387-73412-5
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)