How extensive is the effect of modern farming on bird communities in a sand dune desert?

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Abstract

Bird community structure and diversity measures in sand dune habitats far from and close to modern farms in Wadi Araba, south-west Jordan, were compared using 52 line transects for breeding birds and habitat variables. A change in the bird community of sand dunes surrounding farming projects was measured to a distance of 1 km, but could neither be related to changes in habitat structure nor to the activity of opportunistic predators (Red Fox) as these did not vary significantly between the two samples. The farms included lines of trees and offered a constant source of water, which attracted a variety of opportunistic species, thus increasing bird diversity and total bird abundances. The absence of characteristic ground-dwelling species of open sand dune habitats in the structurally intact sand dunes surrounding farms was likely to be the result of localized, but effectively far-reaching habitat modification (farms acting as barriers) and/or competition with some of the opportunistic species, which were common around farms. © Fares Khoury, Mohammed Al-Shamlih.

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APA

Khoury, F., & Al-Shamlih, M. (2009). How extensive is the effect of modern farming on bird communities in a sand dune desert? ZooKeys, 31(SPEC. ISSUE 6), 211–219. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.31.192

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