Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T04:05:54.788Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The avifauna of the North Selangor peat-swamp forest, West Malaysia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2010

Kang Nee
Affiliation:
Department Of Zoology, National University of Singapore, Kent Ridge, Singapore 0511
Lee Pheng Guan
Affiliation:
Department Of Zoology, National University of Singapore, Kent Ridge, Singapore 0511
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The North Selangor peat-swamp forest occupies an area of about 75,000 ha and has been extensively logged for timber. Of the six sites surveyed, three were located in regenerating or selectively logged areas and contained a higher proportion of forest-dependent species of birds than the other three, which had been extensively cleared by logging and for agriculture. The presence of the nearby Kuala Selangor Nature Park should not diminish the conservation value of the peat-swamp forest, at least where the avifauna is concerned, as their avifauna complement one another.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Birdlife International 1993

References

Aiken, S. R. and Leigh, C. H. (1992) Vanishing rain forests: the ecological transition in Malaysia. Oxford: Clarendon Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collar, N. J. and Andrew, P. (1988) Birds to watch: the ICBP world checklist of threatened birds. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation (Techn. Publ. 8).Google Scholar
Davies, J. and Abdullah, A. R. (1989) Freshwater fish survey of the North Selangor peat–swamp forest. Kuala Lumpur: Asian Wetland Bureau (Publ. 46).Google Scholar
Khan, M. M. K. (1988) Animal conservation strategies. Pp. 251272 in Earl of Cranbrook, ed. Key environments: Malaysia. Oxford: Pergamon Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiew, B. H. (1982) Conservation status of the Malaysian fauna. I. Mammals. Malay. Nat. 35(3): 319.Google Scholar
Kiew, B. H. and Davison, G. (1982) Conservation status of the Malaysian fauna. II. Birds. Malay. Nat. 36(2): 2-25, 2834.Google Scholar
King, B. F., Dickinson, E. C. and Woodcock, M. W. (1975) A field guide to the birds of South-East Asia. London: Collins.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, J. and MacKinnon, K. (1986) Review of the protected areas system in the Indo–Malayan Realm. Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, U.K.: International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.Google Scholar
Malayan Nature Society (unpublished) Checklist of birds at Kuala Selangor Nature Park. Kuala Lumpur: Malayan Nature Society.Google Scholar
Pons, L. J., Prentice, C. and Aikanathan, S. (1988) A preliminary assessment of two peat swamps in Selangor state, Peninsular Malaysia, in relation to their optimal use. Kuala Lumpur: Asian Wetland Bureau (Publ. 30).Google Scholar
Prentice, C. and Aikanathan, S. (1989) A preliminary faunal survey of the North Selangor peat–swamp forest. Kuala Lumpur: Asian Wetland Bureau (Report 46d).Google Scholar
Prentice, C. and Parish, D. (1992). Conservation of peat-swamp forests: a forgotten ecosystem. Malay. Nat. J. 45: 128144.Google Scholar
Wells, D. R. (1985) The forest avifauna of Western Malesia and its conservation. Pp. 213232 in A. W. Diamond and T. E. Lovejoy, eds. Conservation of tropical forest birds. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation (Techn. Publ. 4).Google Scholar
Whitmore, T. C. (1986) Tropical rain forests of the Far East. Second edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wong, M. (1985) Understory birds as indicators of regeneration in a patch of selectively logged West Malaysian rain forest. Pp. 249263 in A. W. Diamond and T. E. Lovejoy, eds. Conservation of tropical forest birds. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation (Techn. Publ. 4).Google Scholar
Wyatt-Smith, J. (1959) Peat Swamp forests in Malaya. Malay. Forester 24: 110121.Google Scholar