Abstract
There is a growing interest to understand the effects that urbanization has on bird species as well as to identifying
opportunities for their conservation in cities. A significant part of the research has focused on testing the importance of
size and vegetation of urban green areas has over the maintaining of richness and abundance of bird species. Conversely
there is a limited knowledge about the influence that have the matrix design that surrounds this spaces. Mainly in relation
to patterns of building height and density. Aspects strongly related to the debate if the cities should be sprawl or compact
as they grow and their impact on biodiversity. This study evaluated the link that the morphological landscape configuration
of the urban matrix (MLCUM) has directly with the diversity and distribution of birds occupying urban green areas. We
characterized and compared bird assemblages in 60 small green areas and 20 larger urban and natural green areas located
in Santiago de Chile. These areas corresponded to a stratified sample of contrasting MLCUM based on height and density
of the surrounding buildings. 12 bird repeated counts were developed between November 2013 and June 2015. Richness and
species-specific abundance patterns were obtained and GLM models were used to quantify and contrast the effect size of
multiple variables at different spatial scales. We concluded that the height and density of the urban matrix are modulating
the composition and structure of urban bird communities and influence the probability of some species to occupy urban
green areas
opportunities for their conservation in cities. A significant part of the research has focused on testing the importance of
size and vegetation of urban green areas has over the maintaining of richness and abundance of bird species. Conversely
there is a limited knowledge about the influence that have the matrix design that surrounds this spaces. Mainly in relation
to patterns of building height and density. Aspects strongly related to the debate if the cities should be sprawl or compact
as they grow and their impact on biodiversity. This study evaluated the link that the morphological landscape configuration
of the urban matrix (MLCUM) has directly with the diversity and distribution of birds occupying urban green areas. We
characterized and compared bird assemblages in 60 small green areas and 20 larger urban and natural green areas located
in Santiago de Chile. These areas corresponded to a stratified sample of contrasting MLCUM based on height and density
of the surrounding buildings. 12 bird repeated counts were developed between November 2013 and June 2015. Richness and
species-specific abundance patterns were obtained and GLM models were used to quantify and contrast the effect size of
multiple variables at different spatial scales. We concluded that the height and density of the urban matrix are modulating
the composition and structure of urban bird communities and influence the probability of some species to occupy urban
green areas
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages | 2-2 |
| Number of pages | 1 |
| State | Published - 2015 |
| Event | Student Conference on Conservation Science - New York - New York, United States Duration: 07 Oct 2015 → 09 Oct 2015 http://chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.amnh.org/content/download/116385/2077976/file/sccs-ny-2015-poster-abstracts4.pdf |
Conference
| Conference | Student Conference on Conservation Science - New York |
|---|---|
| Country/Territory | United States |
| City | New York |
| Period | 07/10/15 → 09/10/15 |
| Internet address |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
-
SDG 11 Sustainable Cities and Communities
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