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Conserving low-intensity farming is key to halting the declines of migratory passerines in their tropical wintering grounds

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


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Authors

Massam, MR 
Assou, D 
Boafo, K 

Abstract

jats:titleAbstract</jats:title>jats:pHalf of all migratory bird species have declined over the past 30 years, with intercontinental migrants declining faster than their short‐distance migratory counterparts. One potential cause of these declines is habitat loss and degradation on tropical wintering grounds, where agricultural conversion of natural habitats and intensification of traditional, low‐intensity agricultural systems are frequently occurring. Although the broad patterns of wintering migrant abundance are well understood along most flyways, how species' habitat associations vary across disturbance gradients in agricultural landscapes remains a key question, with implications for landscape‐level farm management and restoration activities. We used 328 point count locations and associated habitat assessments targeted at a cohort of eight severely declining Afro‐Palaearctic migratory passerines in the Guineo–Congolian transition zone of Western Africa to model the probability of the presence of migrants within grass, shrub, forb and forest‐covered areas. We found support for the widespread use of early successional habitats retained within traditionally managed farmland by migrants. Most species utilize scrubland on fallows within the agricultural mosaic, especially Spotted Flycatcher, Garden Warbler, Melodious Warbler, Whinchat and Common Nightingale. Only Pied Flycatcher relied upon mature forested areas. The avoidance of mature forested habitats by most species suggests that habitat requirements of severely declining migrant birds must be explicitly considered within conservation and restoration schemes, via mechanisms to retain low‐intensity farming, especially short‐term abandoned fallows that regenerate scrubby areas within the agricultural matrix. Any habitat management within the agricultural matrix should be considered in the context of the needs of local communities.</jats:p>

Description

Publication status: Published


Funder: The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds

Keywords

41 Environmental Sciences, 4102 Ecological Applications, 3103 Ecology, 31 Biological Sciences, 15 Life on Land

Journal Title

Animal Conservation

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1367-9430
1469-1795

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/L002450/1)