Artigo

Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil

Although species lists from throughout Amazonia have become available, relatively complete inventories based on longterm work remain rare. Longitudinal comparisons at well-studied sites provide the best opportunities for describing communities and identifying changes in regional avifaunas. Within ce...

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Autor principal: Rutt, Cameron L.
Outros Autores: Jirinec, Vitek, Johnson, Erik I., Cohn-Haft, Mario, Vargas, Claudeir Ferreira, Stouffer, Philip C.
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: English
Publicado em: Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15334
id oai:repositorio:1-15334
recordtype dspace
spelling oai:repositorio:1-15334 Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil Rutt, Cameron L. Jirinec, Vitek Johnson, Erik I. Cohn-Haft, Mario Vargas, Claudeir Ferreira Stouffer, Philip C. Avifauna Bird Forest Fragmentation Neotropical Region Ornithology Solid Earth Species Inventory Amazon River Amazonas Amazonia Brasil Manaus Aves Although species lists from throughout Amazonia have become available, relatively complete inventories based on longterm work remain rare. Longitudinal comparisons at well-studied sites provide the best opportunities for describing communities and identifying changes in regional avifaunas. Within central Amazonia, no region has received as much consistent ornithological coverage as the terra firme forests north of Manaus, Brazil, at the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project (BDFFP). Here we provide an updated list of the area, including notes on all species added between 1997 and 2017. We recorded 21 species new for the site, most of which (>75%) are birds that prefer várzea or second-growth forest. This brings the cumulative BDFFP list up to 409 species, the majority (66%) of which inhabit primary terra firme forest. Together, this confirms that the regional terra firme community had been well-characterized by the 1990s, and that species additions to the list over the last 20 years are consistent with a changing landscape as urbanization, agriculture, and second-growth spread from Manaus. The final product continues to represent the most complete avian inventory for a single site in all of lowland Amazonia. © 2017, Sociedade Brasileira de Ornitologia. All rights reserved. 2020-05-07T23:19:17Z 2020-05-07T23:19:17Z 2017 Artigo https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15334 en Volume 25, Número 4, Pags. 277-296 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazil http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/br/ application/pdf Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia
institution Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia - Repositório Institucional
collection INPA-RI
language English
topic Avifauna
Bird
Forest
Fragmentation
Neotropical Region
Ornithology
Solid Earth
Species Inventory
Amazon River
Amazonas
Amazonia
Brasil
Manaus
Aves
spellingShingle Avifauna
Bird
Forest
Fragmentation
Neotropical Region
Ornithology
Solid Earth
Species Inventory
Amazon River
Amazonas
Amazonia
Brasil
Manaus
Aves
Rutt, Cameron L.
Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil
topic_facet Avifauna
Bird
Forest
Fragmentation
Neotropical Region
Ornithology
Solid Earth
Species Inventory
Amazon River
Amazonas
Amazonia
Brasil
Manaus
Aves
description Although species lists from throughout Amazonia have become available, relatively complete inventories based on longterm work remain rare. Longitudinal comparisons at well-studied sites provide the best opportunities for describing communities and identifying changes in regional avifaunas. Within central Amazonia, no region has received as much consistent ornithological coverage as the terra firme forests north of Manaus, Brazil, at the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project (BDFFP). Here we provide an updated list of the area, including notes on all species added between 1997 and 2017. We recorded 21 species new for the site, most of which (>75%) are birds that prefer várzea or second-growth forest. This brings the cumulative BDFFP list up to 409 species, the majority (66%) of which inhabit primary terra firme forest. Together, this confirms that the regional terra firme community had been well-characterized by the 1990s, and that species additions to the list over the last 20 years are consistent with a changing landscape as urbanization, agriculture, and second-growth spread from Manaus. The final product continues to represent the most complete avian inventory for a single site in all of lowland Amazonia. © 2017, Sociedade Brasileira de Ornitologia. All rights reserved.
format Artigo
author Rutt, Cameron L.
author2 Jirinec, Vitek
Johnson, Erik I.
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Vargas, Claudeir Ferreira
Stouffer, Philip C.
author2Str Jirinec, Vitek
Johnson, Erik I.
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Vargas, Claudeir Ferreira
Stouffer, Philip C.
title Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil
title_short Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil
title_full Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil
title_fullStr Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Twenty years later: An update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, Amazonas, Brazil
title_sort twenty years later: an update to the birds of the biological dynamics of forest fragments project, amazonas, brazil
publisher Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia
publishDate 2020
url https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15334
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score 11.755432