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The value of differently managed cacao plantations for forest bird conservation in Sulawesi, Indonesia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2008

STEFAN ABRAHAMCZYK*
Affiliation:
Albrecht-von-Haller-Institute of Plant Sciences, Georg-August University, Untere Karspüle 2, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
MICHAEL KESSLER
Affiliation:
Albrecht-von-Haller-Institute of Plant Sciences, Georg-August University, Untere Karspüle 2, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
DADANG DWI PUTRA
Affiliation:
Celebes Bird Club, c/o Balai Penelitian dan Pengembangan Zoologi, Puslitbang Biologi – LIPI, Jl. Raya Bogor Jakarta Km 46, Cibinong 16911, Indonesia.
MATTHIAS WALTERT
Affiliation:
Department of Conservation Biology, Centre for Nature Conservation, Georg-August Universität, Von-Siebold-Str. 2, 37075 Göttingen, Germany.
TEJA TSCHARNTKE
Affiliation:
Department of Crop Science, Agroecology, Georg-August-Universität, Waldweg 26, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
*
*Author for correspondence. e-mail: sabraha@gwdg.de
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Summary

In order to assess the potential value of differently managed cacao plantations for bird conservation on Sulawesi, we surveyed birds in near-primary forest (with limited timber and rattan extraction, and some hunting), cacao plantations with remnant forest trees and plantations lacking forest trees, from February to April 2007. A total of 16 50 x 50 m plots were visited twice and records of 87 species were obtained. Bird species richness and the number of endemics and forest specialists decreased along this gradient of forest conversion, with 20% of the forest specialists, among them 10 endemics, exclusively found in forest. Species composition changed dramatically between habitat types. Sørensen indices showed a similarity of species composition between forests and plantations of 45–60% for forest specialists and 65–71% for all species. The most important environmental variable for the diversity and composition of birds was the number of remnant rainforest trees present in the plantations. Our results suggest that large, undisturbed rainforest are most important for the conservation of forest specialists and endemics but that cacao plantations, if managed to maintain a high and diverse cover of forest trees, can harbour up to 60% of forest specialists and endemics.

Information

Type
Research Articles
Copyright
Copyright © BirdLife International 2008
Figure 0

Figure 1. Results of the NMDS ordination analysis based on bird community composition, showing the differentiation into the three habitat categories near-primary forest (black circles), plantations with remnant rainforest trees (grey circles), and plantations without remnant rainforest trees (white circles), as well as the correlation of the ordination axis with important habitat parameters. Axis 1 clearly differentiates between the three habitat categories based on habitat quality, whereas the variation along axis 2 remains largely unexplained by the studied parameters.

Figure 1

Table 2. Species characteristics and distribution (Distribution: E = endemic, R = resident, V = vagrant; Diet: C = carnivores, F = frugivores, G = granivores, I = insectivores, N = nectarivores, O = omnivores; Weight: 1 = 0–10 g, 2 = 11–20 g, 3 = 21–40 g, 4 = 41–80 g, 5 = 81–160 g, 6 = 161–320 g, 7 = 321–640 g, 8 = 641–1280 g, 9 = >1280 g; Stratum G = ground & understorey, M = midstorey, C = canopy; Habitat: F = forest species, G = generalist).

Figure 2

Table 3. Forest specialists, generalists and endemics (bold) occurring in the three habitat types; near-threatened species marked by asterisks.

Figure 3

Table 1. Sörensen similarity indices of the community comparison of different groups of birds between the three habitat types; plantations with remnant rainforest trees (ptI), plantations with remnant rainforest trees (ptII).

Figure 4

Figure 2. Number of bird species in the three habitat types (forest = near-primary forest, ptII = plantations with remnant forest trees, ptI = plantations without remnant trees).