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Journal of BirdLife Australia
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Responses of birds to the characteristics of farm windbreaks in central New South Wales, Australia

C. Kinross A C and H. Nicol B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Charles Sturt University, PO Box 883, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia.

B Nicol Consulting, Dalyup, 95 Ophir Road, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: ckinross@csu.edu.au

Emu 108(2) 139-152 https://doi.org/10.1071/MU06024
Submitted: 29 May 2006  Accepted: 16 April 2008   Published: 11 June 2008

Abstract

In parts of Australia where the clearing of native vegetation has been widespread the establishment of windbreaks is a common farming practice. There is some evidence that birds respond to certain characteristics of windbreaks, particularly width. This is the first study to investigate such effects in Australia. Six properties, containing 61 windbreak sites, were surveyed for birds 12 times between 1993 and 1997. Generalised linear models were used to test relationships between 19 predictor variables and bird community attributes, including the densities of 14 species of birds. Canonical variate analysis was undertaken to discriminate among four types of windbreaks and their avifauna. Species known to be declining in the region and uncommon (<100 observations) woodland birds were more abundant in wider and more floristically diverse windbreak sites. Several native species had a positive response to tree-height, density of understorey, structural diversity, the proportion of native plant species in the site or the proximity of remnant bushland. The density of introduced bird species, as a group, was strongly negatively related to the proportion of native plants and, for one species, Common Starling (Sturnus vulgaris), to width of windbreak. Recommendations for windbreak design are provided and include: using a diversity of native plants; providing adequate width, preferably over 20 m; and having a diversity of understorey densities. It is also recommended that patterns of experimental windbreaks are created that could be used for formal hypothesis testing.


Acknowledgments

We thank the landowners of the properties where the fieldwork was undertaken: the Thompsons (Caringle), the Browns (Tunbridge Wells), the Marshes (Allendale) and the Prattens (Koolawong), and to Professor John Chudleigh (University of Sydney, Orange) and Doug Wheen (Macquarie Woods State Forest). I would like to acknowledge help from my colleagues, in particular Dr David Goldney and the late Liz Greer. The draft has been improved through helpful comments from David Lindenmayer, Geoff Gurr, Rod Kavanagh, and three anonymous reviewers.


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Appendix 1.  Species used to form the woodland and declining species categories
References: 1, Reid (1999), identified as declining in the NSW Sheep–Wheat Belt (immediately to the west of the Central Tablelands; 2, Fisher (2000), identified as declining in the Bathurst Landscape; 3, Barrett (1994), identified as declining and woodland species on the Armidale Plateau; 4, Bennett and Ford (1997), identified as woodland species; 5, Reid (2000), identified as declining and woodland species; V, listed as Vulnerable under the Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995 (NSW)
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