Journal Article10.1007/S10344-018-1205-Y
Multi-scale turtle dove nest habitat selection in a Mediterranean agroforestry landscape: implications for the conservation of a vulnerable species
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TL;DR: This work investigated the effect of different variables at two spatial scales on the probability of presence of turtle dove nests in an agroforestry system of Central Morocco and found the most relevant scale was the nest site level, followed by landscape scales, but the model including both nest-scale and landscape-scale variables was best.
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Abstract: Determination of factors affecting nest habitat selection is a major topic in avian ecology, with strong implications for conservation purposes especially for the species with unfavorable status. The turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur) is a vulnerable species that has undergone a rapid and serious decline across its distribution range. I investigated the effect of different variables at two spatial scales (10-m radius, nest site; and 100-m radius, landscape) on the probability of presence of turtle dove nests in an agroforestry system of Central Morocco. Topography, habitat structure, human disturbance, and land use parameters were measured at nests (n = 70) and random points (n = 70) at both scales. Generalized linear model analyses showed that, at the nest site scale, tree height best explained occurrence of turtle dove nests (with nest occurring preferentially in smaller trees). At the landscape scale, nest occurrence probability decreased with elevation and distance to the nearest forest edge, and increased with forest cover and distance to the nearest habitation. Comparison of explanatory power of the single-scale models showed that the most relevant scale was the nest site level, followed by landscape scales, but the model including both nest-scale and landscape-scale variables was best. The variation partitioning analysis confirmed this pattern. In study area, the turtle dove nest habitat selection process occurs within a relatively small scale, but the joint effect of variables at the two scales is relevant. From a practical perspective, it would be interesting to reproduce the same experimental approach on other Mediterranean breeding habitats (agricultural and other forest habitats) to find out if this species would adopt the same nest habitat selection pattern.
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Citations
Landscape composition governs the abundance patterns of native and invasive Columbidae species along an urban–rural gradient and contribute to their partitioning
TL;DR: In this article, an urban-rural gradient approach was performed to evaluate relationships between abundances of three sympatric dove species, namely invasive Eurasian collared dove (Streptopelia decaocto), expanding laughing dove (Spilopelia senegalensis), and landscape composition, and identify the elements of the landscape that are determining in explaining the abundance patterns for these three species.
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The European Turtle Dove in the ecotone between woodland and farmland: multi-scale habitat associations and implications for the design of management interventions
TL;DR: The European Turtle Dove (turtle dove) is globally threatened after undergoing a sustained and generalised decline across its breeding range, with habitat loss suggested as the main driver as mentioned in this paper .
Spatial Distribution and Habitat Overlap of Five Columbidae Species in the Czech Republic
TL;DR: It is concluded that Columbidae species overlap in spatial distributions, mostly in urban areas, forests, and farmlands, as well as between Columba palumbus and Streptopelia turtur.
Discriminating between nesting and non-nesting habitat in a vulnerable bird species: implications for behavioural ecology
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether or not the turtle dove nesting habitats overlap with those used for other purposes in a North African agroforestry system and found substantial segregation in the habitats selected for nesting and those selected for other uses, with selection depending primarily on the proximity to forest edge and feeding areas.
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Tree characteristics, microhabitat and edge effect in plantations govern European Turtle-dove Streptopelia turtur nest habitat selection at the edge of Sahara: implications for conservation of a vulnerable species
TL;DR: In this paper, tree characteristics, microhabitat, and human presence were measured around nest trees and non-nest trees to identify the best predictors of the European Turtle-dove Streptopelia turtur nest occurrence in date palm plantations of the Biskra region (Algeria).
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