Litcius/Paper detail

Diversity of Bird Communities in Tea (Camellia sinensis) Plantations in Fujian Province, South-Eastern China

Titus Imboma, Marco Ferrante, Minsheng You, Shijun You, Gábor L. Löveï

2020Diversity13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Habitat conversion in mountain areas threatens their biodiversity. The effect on biodiversity of creating a mountain landscape with a network of forest fragments and a cultivated habitat matrix is poorly documented in China. Bird communities in forest fragments and tea plantations were censused by field observations in two years (2018–2019) in three tea-growing locations, Anxi, Beifeng, and Wuyishan in Fujian Province, south-eastern China. Out of a potential pool of 247 forest-associated bird species, we detected the presence of 82, mostly resident species, 32–47 of those regularly visiting tea plantations. Species-accumulation curves indicated the near-completeness of the census. The Rényi diversity profiles indicated a more diverse community in forest fragments than nearby tea plantations at Anxi and Beifeng, but the tea plantations at Wuyishan supported a more diverse bird community than the forest. Avian communities in tea plantations were a significantly nested subset of the forest communities. Tea plantations can provide resources for forest-associated birds, but the effectiveness of preserving avian diversity depends on natural forest fragments and can be enhanced by landscape-scale management, when the biocontrol potential of birds can also be enhanced.

Topics & Concepts

BiodiversityGeographyCamellia sinensisHabitatAgroforestrySpecies diversityChinaEcologyOld-growth forestForestryBiologyBotanyArchaeologyEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesWildlife Ecology and Conservation