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Satellite
detection of bird communities in tropical
countryside.
Department of
Biological Sciences, Stanford University,
Stanford, California
The future of
biodiversity hinges partly on realizing the
potentially high conservation value of
human-dominated countryside. The
characteristics of the countryside that
promote biodiversity preservation remain
poorly understood, however, particularly at
the fine scales at which individual farmers
tend to make land use decisions. To address
this problem, we explored the use of a rapid
remote sensing method for estimating bird
community composition in tropical
countryside, using a two-step process.
First, we asked how fine-grained variation
in land cover affected community
composition. Second, we determined whether
the observed changes in community
composition correlated with three easily
accessible remote sensing metrics (wetness,
greenness, and brightness), derived from
performing a tasseled-cap transformation on
a Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus
image. As a comparison, we also examined
whether the most commonly used remote
sensing indicator in ecology, the Normalized
Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI),
correlated with community composition. We
worked within an agricultural landscape in
southern Costa Rica, where the land
comprised a complex and highly heterogeneous
mosaic of remnant native vegetation,
pasture, coffee cultivation, and other
crops. In this region, we selected 12 study
sites (each < 60 ha) that encompassed the
range of available land cover possibilities
in the countryside. Within each site, we
surveyed bird communities within all major
land cover types, and we conducted detailed
field mapping of land cover. We found that
the number of forest-affiliated species
increased with forest cover and decreased
with residential area across sites.
Conversely, the number of
agriculture-affiliated species using forest
increased with land area devoted to
agricultural and residential uses.
Interestingly, we found that the wetness and
brightness metrics predicted the number of
forest- and agriculture-affiliated species
within a site as well as did detailed
field-generated maps of land cover. In
contrast, NDVI and the closely correlated
greenness metric did not correlate with land
cover or with bird communities. Our study
shows the strong potential of the
tasseled-cap transformation as a tool for
assessing the conservation value of
countryside for biodiversity.