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I studied the influence of local- and landscape-level habitat factors on breeding-bird communities in a prairie landscape in southwestern Oklahoma, U.S.A. Local habitat characteristics were sampled at study plot transects. Landscape variables within 100 m
Habitat regression models using local and landscape habitat components explained 79% of the variation in bird species richness and 41% of the variation in abundance. Bird species richness was best explained by landscape habitat variables, while overall bird abundance was related to a combination of local and landscape variables. Abundance of woodland and grassland/savanna species was accounted for by local habitat variables representing vegetation and a slope gradient. Models for typical woodland species--Tufted Titmice (Parus bicolor), Red-eyed Vireos (Vireo olivaceus), Great Crested Flycatchers (Myiarchus crinitus), and Northern Cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis)--were explained primarily by local vegetation characteristics
I evaluated the degree of fragmentation of habitats used by grassland and savanna bird species in a prairie landscape. Habitat fragmentation was estimated using perimeter-area fractal dimension computed at 13 spatial scales ranging from 10 to 1,000 ha. Habitats occupied by grassland/savanna birds were significantly different from randomly-chosen sites at spatial scales of 50 and 75 ha. Mourning Doves, Dickcissels, Field Sparrows, and Eastern Meadowlarks occurred in habitats that exhibited a higher level of fragmentation than random sites. Natural fragmentation of the grasslands by woodlands associated with intermittent streams has a strong influence on the distribution of grassland/savanna birds. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)