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DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0216540
Bird community shifts associated with saltwater exposure in coastal forests at the leading edge of rising sea level
Taillie, Paul J.; Moorman, Christopher E.; Smart, Lindsey S.; Pacifici, Krishna
发表日期2019
ISSN1932-6203
卷号14期号:5
英文摘要

Rising sea levels dramatically alter the vegetation composition and structure of coastal ecosystems. However, the implications of these changes for coastal wildlife are poorly understood. We aimed to quantify responses of avian communities to forest change (i.e., ghost forests) in a low-lying coastal region highly vulnerable to rising sea level. We conducted point counts to sample avian communities at 156 forested points in eastern North Carolina, USA in 2013-2015. We modelled avian community composition using a multi-species hierarchical occupancy model and used metrics of vegetation structure derived from Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data as covariates related to variation in bird responses. We used this model to predict occupancy for each bird species in 2001 (using an analogous 2001 LiDAR dataset) and 2014 and used the change in occupancy probability to estimate habitat losses and gains at 3 spatial extents: 1) the entire study area, 2) burned forests only, and 3) unburned, low-lying coastal forests only. Of the 56 bird species we investigated, we observed parameter estimates corresponding to a higher likelihood of occurring in ghost forest for 34 species, but only 9 of those had 95% posterior intervals that did not overlap 0, thus having strong support. Despite the high vulnerability of forests in the region to sea level rise, habitat losses and gains associated with rising sea level were small relative to those resulting from wildfire. Though the extent of habitat changes associated with the development of ghost forest was limited, these changes likely are more permanent and may compound over time as sea level rises at an increasing rate. As such, the proliferation of ghost forests from rising sea level has potential to become an important driver of forest bird habitat change in coastal regions.


WOS研究方向Science & Technology - Other Topics
来源期刊PLOS ONE
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/97697
作者单位North Carolina State Univ, Forestry & Environm Resources Dept, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
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GB/T 7714
Taillie, Paul J.,Moorman, Christopher E.,Smart, Lindsey S.,et al. Bird community shifts associated with saltwater exposure in coastal forests at the leading edge of rising sea level[J],2019,14(5).
APA Taillie, Paul J.,Moorman, Christopher E.,Smart, Lindsey S.,&Pacifici, Krishna.(2019).Bird community shifts associated with saltwater exposure in coastal forests at the leading edge of rising sea level.PLOS ONE,14(5).
MLA Taillie, Paul J.,et al."Bird community shifts associated with saltwater exposure in coastal forests at the leading edge of rising sea level".PLOS ONE 14.5(2019).
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