Mr. Williams et al., Recovery of bird populations after clearfelling of tall open eucalypt forest in Western Australia, J APPL ECOL, 38(5), 2001, pp. 910-920
1. Increasing concern over the sustainable management of forested landscape
s and the extent of forest clearance world-wide has led to a growing intere
st in the impacts of logging and associated habitat disturbance on biodiver
sity.
2. We conducted an experimental study of the impact of clearfelling on bird
s of the karri Eucalyptus diversicolor forest in south-west Western Austral
ia over a 17-year period, and a retrospective study of both clearfelled and
naturally regenerated karri stands aged from 0 to 146 years.
3. One-third of species still had significantly reduced abundance 14 years
after disturbance ceased, although all affected species made limited use of
regenerating forest.
4. Multivariate analysis of changes in bird community structure showed that
the effects of disturbance were still evident 14 years after clearfelling.
Clearfelling may also have produced some temporary changes in community st
ructure in adjacent unlogged forest.
5. Species richness and total abundance of birds declined by 58% and 96%, r
espectively, in the first year after clearfelling, and 14 years after loggi
ng were still 17% and 55% below levels in adjacent undisturbed forest. Duri
ng this early successional phase both measures increased as a simple functi
on of stand age. Species richness of regrowth reach-od that of old-growth a
t 30-50, years and total abundance of all bird species in regrowth was simi
lar to that of old-growth after approximately 70 years.
6. Several bird species offer potential as indicators of the ecological sus
tainability of karri forest management. These species nest in large hollows
in standing live trees (two cockatoo species) or have been slow to recolon
ize immature regrowth karri forests (six species).
7. Post-hoc power analysis showed that even the long-term and intensive sam
pling employed in this study failed to detect declines in abundance of less
than 80-90% for most bird species. For many uncommon species, trying to es
timate changes in abundance is problematic and likely to require replicatio
n which is difficult to achieve in field situations where logged and unlogg
ed forests are compared. Despite this, the present study identified some ke
y impacts of forest clearfelling on bird communities, with implications bot
h for the consequences of clearfelling of forests and the criteria for sust
ainable forest management.