Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya

The increasing demand for cultivated lands driven by human population growth, escalating consumption and activities, combined with the vast area of uncultivated land, highlight the pressing need to better understand the biodiversity conservation implications of land use change in Sub-Saharan Africa....

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Autores principales: Mugatha, Simon M., Ogutu, Joseph O., Piepho, H.-P., Maitima, J.M.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149067
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author Mugatha, Simon M.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Piepho, H.-P.
Maitima, J.M.
author_browse Maitima, J.M.
Mugatha, Simon M.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Piepho, H.-P.
author_facet Mugatha, Simon M.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Piepho, H.-P.
Maitima, J.M.
author_sort Mugatha, Simon M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The increasing demand for cultivated lands driven by human population growth, escalating consumption and activities, combined with the vast area of uncultivated land, highlight the pressing need to better understand the biodiversity conservation implications of land use change in Sub-Saharan Africa. Land use change alters natural wildlife habitats with fundamental consequences for biodiversity. Consequently, species richness and diversity typically decline as land use changes from natural to disturbed. We assess how richness and diversity of avian species, grouped into feeding guilds, responded to land use changes, primarily expansion of settlements and cultivation at three sites in the Lake Victoria Basin in western Kenya, following tsetse control interventions. Each site consisted of a matched pair of spatially adjacent natural/semi-natural and settled/cultivated landscapes. Significant changes occurred in bird species richness and diversity in the disturbed relative to the natural landscape. Disturbed areas had fewer guilds and all guilds in disturbed areas also occurred in natural areas. Guilds had significantly more species in natural than in disturbed areas. The insectivore/granivore and insectivore/wax feeder guilds occurred only in natural areas. Whilst species diversity was far lower, a few species of estrildid finches were more common in the disturbed landscapes and were often observed on the scrubby edges of modified habitats. In contrast, the natural and less disturbed wooded areas had relatively fewer estrildid species and were completely devoid of several other species. In aggregate, land use changes significantly reduced bird species richness and diversity on the disturbed landscapes regardless of their breeding range size or foraging style (migratory or non-migratory) and posed greater risks to non-migratory species. Accordingly, land use planning should integrate conservation principles that preserve salient habitat qualities required by different bird species, such as adequate patch size and habitat connectivity, conserve viable bird populations and restore degraded habitats to alleviate adverse impacts of land use change on avian species richness and diversity.
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spelling CGSpace1490672024-11-15T08:52:40Z Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya Mugatha, Simon M. Ogutu, Joseph O. Piepho, H.-P. Maitima, J.M. birds land-use change wildlife The increasing demand for cultivated lands driven by human population growth, escalating consumption and activities, combined with the vast area of uncultivated land, highlight the pressing need to better understand the biodiversity conservation implications of land use change in Sub-Saharan Africa. Land use change alters natural wildlife habitats with fundamental consequences for biodiversity. Consequently, species richness and diversity typically decline as land use changes from natural to disturbed. We assess how richness and diversity of avian species, grouped into feeding guilds, responded to land use changes, primarily expansion of settlements and cultivation at three sites in the Lake Victoria Basin in western Kenya, following tsetse control interventions. Each site consisted of a matched pair of spatially adjacent natural/semi-natural and settled/cultivated landscapes. Significant changes occurred in bird species richness and diversity in the disturbed relative to the natural landscape. Disturbed areas had fewer guilds and all guilds in disturbed areas also occurred in natural areas. Guilds had significantly more species in natural than in disturbed areas. The insectivore/granivore and insectivore/wax feeder guilds occurred only in natural areas. Whilst species diversity was far lower, a few species of estrildid finches were more common in the disturbed landscapes and were often observed on the scrubby edges of modified habitats. In contrast, the natural and less disturbed wooded areas had relatively fewer estrildid species and were completely devoid of several other species. In aggregate, land use changes significantly reduced bird species richness and diversity on the disturbed landscapes regardless of their breeding range size or foraging style (migratory or non-migratory) and posed greater risks to non-migratory species. Accordingly, land use planning should integrate conservation principles that preserve salient habitat qualities required by different bird species, such as adequate patch size and habitat connectivity, conserve viable bird populations and restore degraded habitats to alleviate adverse impacts of land use change on avian species richness and diversity. 2024 2024-07-14T14:03:33Z 2024-07-14T14:03:33Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149067 en Open Access Nature Portfolio Mugatha, S.M., Ogutu, J.O., Piepho, H.P. and Maitima, J.M. 2024. Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya. Scientific Reports 14:1711.
spellingShingle birds
land-use change
wildlife
Mugatha, Simon M.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Piepho, H.-P.
Maitima, J.M.
Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya
title Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya
title_full Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya
title_fullStr Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya
title_short Bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya
title_sort bird species richness and diversity responses to land use change in the lake victoria basin kenya
topic birds
land-use change
wildlife
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149067
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