Habitat analysis from infra-red aerial photographs and the conservation of birds in Swedish agricultural landscapes

The populations of many farmland birds have declined with the modernization of agriculture, particularly specialization in a few arable crops which often require the removal of the habitats associated with traditional farming and the remnants of seminatural habitats. It is difficult to identify habi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ambio 1990, Vol.19 (4), p.195-203
Hauptverfasser: Robertson, Jeremy GM, Eknert, Bo, Ihse, Margareta
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container_title Ambio
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creator Robertson, Jeremy GM
Eknert, Bo
Ihse, Margareta
description The populations of many farmland birds have declined with the modernization of agriculture, particularly specialization in a few arable crops which often require the removal of the habitats associated with traditional farming and the remnants of seminatural habitats. It is difficult to identify habitats and map all birds in large areas and consequently most studies have been constrained to small areas (≤ 100 ha) that fail to include all the rural habitats or the rare species that are of interest to conservationists. We describe a new technique in which by considering only indicator or rare species we were able to study two much larger areas ($22\ {\rm km}^{2}$) in central Sweden, and could identify their habitats by interpreting infrared aerial photographs. We compare a small-scaled and varied rural landscape, of the traditional type, with a modern large-scale landscape, and show that features of the traditional landscape (meadows, scrubland and deciduous woodland) support higher bird diversity and densities than modern landscape features (coniferous plantations and clear-cuts). Combining large-scale mapping and habitat analysis thus enables us to quantitatively define which habitat components are the most important for supporting a high diversity of birds and hence are of the greatest conservation interest. Furthermore, habitat analysis from infrared aerial photographs might be used as a means of predicting the densities of birds and hence the conservation value of areas that have not been censused.
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We describe a new technique in which by considering only indicator or rare species we were able to study two much larger areas ($22\ {\rm km}^{2}$) in central Sweden, and could identify their habitats by interpreting infrared aerial photographs. We compare a small-scaled and varied rural landscape, of the traditional type, with a modern large-scale landscape, and show that features of the traditional landscape (meadows, scrubland and deciduous woodland) support higher bird diversity and densities than modern landscape features (coniferous plantations and clear-cuts). Combining large-scale mapping and habitat analysis thus enables us to quantitatively define which habitat components are the most important for supporting a high diversity of birds and hence are of the greatest conservation interest. Furthermore, habitat analysis from infrared aerial photographs might be used as a means of predicting the densities of birds and hence the conservation value of areas that have not been censused.</abstract><pub>Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences</pub><tpages>9</tpages></addata></record>
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identifier ISSN: 0044-7447
ispartof Ambio, 1990, Vol.19 (4), p.195-203
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1654-7209
language eng
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Aerial photography
aerial surveying
Aves
Bird Habitats in Sweden
Birds
Crops
densidad de la poblacion
densite de population
Farming
farmland
Farmlands
Forest habitats
fotografia
habitat
Habitat conservation
habitats
land use
Meadows
oiseau
pajaros
photographie
photography
population density
reconocimiento aereo
releve aerien
suecia
suede
sweden
terre agricole
tierras agricolas
utilisation des terres
utilizacion de la tierra
Wildlife habitats
Woodlands
title Habitat analysis from infra-red aerial photographs and the conservation of birds in Swedish agricultural landscapes
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