Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Abandoned pastoral settlements provide concentrations of resources for 160 savanna birds
Author
Soderstrom, Bo
Reid, Robin S
Publisher
Acta Oecologica
Publication Year
2010
Body

Knowledge is poor of how fertilization affects birds in grasslands. We investigated the impact on birds of abandoned pastoral settlements that historically received very high levels of livestock dung. A total of 28 abandoned settlements and 74 landscape controls - in Koyake Group Ranch and Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya - were surveyed for birds during the wet and/or dry season. Our results showed that bird species richness and total abundance increased within 200 m of abandoned pastoral settlements, particularly during the dry season when foraging resources on the savanna are limited. The high concentrations of nutrients inside abandoned settlements favoured the abundance of Diptera and Coleoptera, as shown by invertebrate surveys performed during the dry season on a subset of 32 sites. Both total numbers and dry biomass of these two invertebrate orders were higher on abandoned settlements in comparison with the surrounding landscape. We conclude that higher fertilization levels cause a temporal and spatial redistribution of birds on the savanna. Livestock fertilization and bird abundance are probably linked through an increase in abundance of invertebrate food upon which birds feed in an opportunistic fashion.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
36
Journal Number
2
Journal Pages
184-190
Journal Name
Acta Oecologica
Keywords
Diptera
fertilization
Insectivorous birds
Masai Mara
Pitfall traps
Sweep netting
birds
Abandoned lands
grasslands
invertebrates
fertilizer
Kenya
Africa