Another approach would be to read the literature on the effect of
creating patchy habitat remnants on avifauna. Gardens are the
ultimate patchy habitat, with their fences and different vegetation
types every 15 metres or less. I did a small study in Brisbane
recently that showed that for my area gardens of 1+ acre had twice the
diversity of 1/4 acre block gardens (although they had the same number
of birds per sq metre).
I've also found that introduced bird species such as Spotted
Turtle-doves and Common Mynahs are far more common in urban/disturbed
areas, so I guess native birds in competition with those species are
less able to cope.
Regards,
Chris
On Wed, 29 Sep 2004 08:24:12 +1000, Peter Woodall
<> wrote:
> Hi Craig
>
> I don't have any direct data on what you want, but the garden
> bird surveys run in Queensland (predominantly in the SE :
> Woodall 2002 Sunbird 32: 37-51) indicate
> what is present in suburban gardens (ie after development)
> and you could compare that with the avifauna of the area
> about to be developed.
>
> I think that the summary is that small birds disappear and only
> the larger ones survive: the top 5 were: Rainbow Lorikeet, Laughing
> Kookaburra, Australian Magpie, Torresian Crow and Magpielark.
>
> I hope that this helps
>
> Peter
>
>
>
> At 02:20 PM 28/09/2004 +1000, you wrote:
> >Can anyone suggest any good references for the impact of urban
> >development, particularly expansion of housing, and the effects on
> >native birdlife, including which species are particularly susceptible
> >and which are able to cope. I am looking at this predominantly from a
> >Brisbane perspective but any good data might be useful.
> >
> >Craig Doolan
> >
> >
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