Introduction
The world’s forests continue to decrease in extent, resulting in vast areas of degraded lands (FAO 2005). Tropical land cover change is predicted to threaten the survival of many species in coming years (Dirzo and Raven Reference Dirzo and Raven2003). Active forest restoration is increasingly important to counter present trends (Lamb et al. Reference Lamb, Erskine and Parrotta2005, Chazdon Reference Chazdon2008).
More than 10% of migratory bird species are classified as threatened or near-threatened by BirdLife International (Kirby et al. Reference Kirby, Stattersfield, Butchart, Evans, Grimmett, Jones, O’Sullivan, Tucker and Newton2008). Previous work indicates that land cover change on tropical wintering grounds has negatively affected migrant populations (Robbins et al. Reference Robbins, Sauer, Greenberg and Droege1989, Newton Reference Newton2004, Norris et al. Reference Norris, Marra, Kurt, Sherry and Ratcliffe2004, Holmes Reference Holmes2007). However, despite calls to investigate strategies to improve tropical lands for migrant use (Greenberg Reference Greenberg, Hagan and Johnston1992a) migrant responses to tropical restoration efforts are virtually unexplored (Reid et al. Reference Reid, Harris, Martin, Barnett and Zahawi2008).
Bird habitat use is driven by environmental characteristics on a number of scales, from the micro-scale, to the patch scale, to the landscape scale (Hutto Reference Hutto and Cody1985). We considered patch and landscape scales in this study by comparing migrant captures in 50 x 50 m plots with different planting designs and surrounded by landscapes that varied in forest cover. This plot size is often the focus of restoration efforts (e.g. Chapman and Chapman Reference Chapman and Chapman1999, Zahawi and Augspurger Reference Zahawi and Augspurger2006) and birds show ecological and behavioural responses to vegetation patterns at this scale (e.g. Leyequién et al. Reference Leyequién, de Boer and Toledo2010, Morrison et al. Reference Morrison, Lindell, Holl and Zahawi2010). Recapture data showed the plots were regularly used by individual birds within and across winters, indicating that the plots comprise part, although likely not all, of individuals’ winter ranges. Landscape effects on wintering Neotropical migrants have not been previously investigated. However, landscape characteristics have influenced resident birds in restoration contexts (e.g. Lindenmayer et al. Reference Lindenmayer, Knight, Crane, Montague-Drake, Michale and MacGregor2010) and knowledge of landscape affects could help prioritise sites for restoration.
Planting trees in islands rather than covering an area, plantation-style, has been gaining attention as a restoration planting design because 1) islands serve as foci for plant colonisation (Robinson and Handel Reference Robinson and Handel2000), 2) it is more cost-effective to plant and maintain tree seedlings in islands rather than over large areas, and 3) island planting may attract a variety of species types (Rey Benayas et al. Reference Rey Benayas, Bullock and Newton2008). However, no previous work has compared planting design effects on migrant use of sites. Our study design provided a high degree of replication; 14 sites were planted with seedlings in three treatments: control (no planting of seedlings), island (planting in islands), and plantation (planting to cover an area). The control treatments resembled active pasture or recently abandoned pasture, which provides poor habitat for most wintering migrants (e.g. Estrada et al. Reference Estrada, Coates-Estrada and Meritt1997). We assumed controls would have the fewest migrant captures. Greater migrant captures in island treatments compared to plantation treatments would indicate that planting in islands more quickly resulted in habitat that was used by migrants. We did not assume that island or plantation treatments would provide optimal migrant habitat; our focus was on determining which treatment more quickly moved an area from poor-quality to better-quality habitat early in the restoration process.
We investigated vegetation height, planting design, season, and land cover effects on the number of captures of four species that, based on Breeding Bird Survey data (Sauer et al. Reference Sauer, Hines and Fallon2008), declined significantly in North America from 1992 to 2007: Chestnut-sided Warbler Dendroica pensylvanica, Mourning Warbler Oporornis philadelphia, Swainson’s Thrush Catharus ustulatus, and Tennessee Warbler Vermivora peregrina. We expected that the species with greater affinity for woody habitat, Chestnut-sided Warblers and Swainson’s Thrushes (Richardson and Brauning Reference Richardson, Brauning and Poole1995, Mack and Wang Reference Mack, Wang and Poole2000), would be captured most often in high-vegetation sites in high forest cover landscapes and in plantation treatments. We predicted similar but weaker patterns for Tennessee Warblers because their wintering site use is flexible (e.g. Robbins et al. Reference Robbins, Dowell, Dawson, Colón, Estrada, Sutton, Sutton, Weyer, Hagan and Johnston1992). Mourning Warblers use densely vegetated habitat like abandoned pasture (Stiles and Skutch Reference Stiles and Skutch1989). Thus, we did not expect strong effects of vegetation height, planting treatment, or landscape forest cover on captures of this species. We also expected that more migrant species would be captured in plantation and island treatments compared to control treatments and that plantation treatments would be used more by species with affinities for woody vegetation.
Methods
Study sites
Study sites were in Coto Brus county, Costa Rica, between Agua Buena, 8°44’N, 82°56’W and the Las Cruces Biological Station, 8°47’N, 82°57’W (Figure 1). Fourteen sites were planted with four species of tree seedlings, Terminalia amazonia (J.F. Gmel.) Exell [Combretaceae], Vochysia guatemalensis Donn. Sm. [Vochysiaceae], Erythrina poeppigiana (Walp.) O.F. Cook [Fabaceae], and Inga edulis Mart. [Fabaceae]. All species are native or naturalised to the region.
Six sites were planted in 2004, five in 2005, and three in 2006. Because sites were planted in different years and because seedling growth rates varied among sites, vegetation height varied. We classified sites into vegetation height categories (low or high) based on the average height of Inga trees, the fastest growing species, in plantation and island treatments as measured in July 2007: low = mean of 79−332 cm (n = 10); high = 490−576 cm (n = 4).
Sites were between 1,050 m and 1,450 m in elevation and the majority were > 1.2 km from each other with two pairs separated by > 600 m. Sites were pasture or sun coffee before being planted and species present included non-native grasses and herbs. All sites were mechanically cleared of vegetation, including coffee plants, before planting.
Each site had three 50 x 50-m treatments or plot types (we use the terms interchangeably): 1) a control plot where no seedlings were planted, 2) a plantation plot where seedlings were planted to cover the entire area, and 3) an island plot where seedlings were planted in six islands: two of 4 x 4 m, two of 8 x 8 m, and two of 12 x 12 m. Seedlings were planted 2.8 m apart. All treatments were cleared of vegetation every few months for the first 2.5 years to allow the seedlings to become established. The matrix in between the islands comprised grasses and herbs, with woody species becoming more common over time (Holl et al. 2011).
Bird sampling
Permanent mist-net lanes were established along trails in plots. Three nets, 12 m long and 2.6 m high, were used in each treatment during a morning of sampling. Nets were opened within 30 min of sunrise and kept open for five hours, resulting in 15 hours per treatment and a total of 45 hours of sampling per round per site. Nets were closed during rain or high winds. Sampling took place in February 2006 and in the 2006/2007 and 2007/2008 wintering seasons, during November, February, and April for a total of seven sampling rounds. Eight sites were sampled during all seven rounds, five sites during six of the rounds and one site during one round. Birds were identified to species and banded with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service bands.
Land cover measurements
We conducted land cover analyses using aerial photographs taken in 1998 (the Terra project) and 2005 (the Carta project) in campaigns sponsored by the Costa Rican government. Most of the classification was made with the 2005 photos, collected during March and April 2005, at a scale of 1:150,000. For a few sites, photos from 1998 were used to fill in areas with shadows or clouds. The 1998 photos were collected from November 1997 to February 1998 at a scale of 1:40,000. Photos were orthorectified by Dr. David Morales and analyses were conducted with ArcGIS 9.1.
Primary and secondary forest and other non-forest land cover classes were identified and quantified manually, using texture characteristics and FAO guidelines (FAO 1998). Proportions of each class were calculated for 500 m buffers constructed around the centre of each treatment. Ground truth data were collected in mid-2007 and 2008 to check the classification of each polygon. When discrepancies were found, the classification was changed. We summed the proportions of the primary and secondary forest classes for each buffer and averaged these values for the three buffers per site to arrive at one value. We classified each site as having sparse (10−26%, n = 4), or moderate (34−76%, n = 6) landscape forest cover.
Analysis of individual species captures
The number of captures per net hour of each species was calculated for each site/treatment/sampling round combination and used as the response variable in mixed model analyses, conducted with the Glimmix procedure in SAS 9.1.3 (SAS Institute 2002-2003) which can incorporate both random and fixed effects.
For the warbler species, treatment (plantation, island, or control), season (November, February, or April), vegetation height (high or low), and landscape forest cover (sparse or moderate) were fixed factors. Swainson’s Thrushes were captured primarily in April (77 of 79 captures) so we excluded season from this species’ model and included only April captures in analyses. We identified potentially important interactions between fixed effect variables with two-way contingency table analyses. Sample sizes limited the power to detect three-way interactions. Cell frequencies were the number of captures of a species for each two-variable combination, adjusted for sampling effort (Sokal and Rohlf Reference Sokal and Rohlf1995). Interactions that were significant at the P < 0.05 level were included as fixed factors in global models. A repeated measures factor was used in all models because sites were sampled multiple times. Site was included as a random factor for all species.
In addition to the global models, we tested a nested subset of models for each species. Nested models were chosen based on the P-values for each factor in the model above it in the hierarchy. The factor with the highest P-value was excluded from the next nested model.
We chose the best model for each species and each dataset by calculating the difference in chi-square values for pairs of nested models. If the difference in the chi-square values is significant, the model with more variables explains the response variable significantly better than the model with fewer variables (Stevens Reference Stevens2002). We tested for significant differences between classes within variables using the Contrast statement which computes an F statistic based on a matrix associated with the fixed and random effects of the model (SAS Institute 2006).
Migrant classification
Migrant species were classified according to relative use of open habitats and woody substrates on wintering grounds, based on previous descriptions (Lynch Reference Lynch1989, Stiles and Skutch Reference Stiles and Skutch1989, Greenberg Reference Greenberg, Hagan and Johnston1992b, Lynch Reference Lynch, Hagan and Johnston1992, Petit et al. Reference Petit, Petit, Smith, Hagan and Johnston1992, Powell et al. Reference Powell, Rappole, Sader, Hagan and Johnston1992, Robbins et al. Reference Robbins, Dowell, Dawson, Colón, Estrada, Sutton, Sutton, Weyer, Hagan and Johnston1992, Greenberg et al. Reference Greenberg, Bichier and Sterling1997, Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Sherry, Holmes and Marra2006). The first category (open) included species that primarily use open habitat and little woody vegetation, the second (mixed) included species that use both open and forested habitats and woody substrates, and the third (woody) included species that primarily use forested habitats and woody vegetation.
Results
Focal species
Chestnut-sided Warblers, Swainson’s Thrushes, and Tennessee Warblers were captured significantly more often in plantations than islands or controls (Tables 1 and 2). Capture numbers in islands and controls were not significantly different for Swainson’s Thrushes and Tennessee Warblers. Season significantly influenced Tennessee Warblers captures; only 11% were in April. The Mourning Warbler was the only species for which vegetation height was a significant positive influence (Tables 1 and 2). Landscape forest cover did not influence captures of any species.
* Sample size is the sum of the number of sites multiplied by the number of times each site was sampled, multiplied by the number of treatments. The sample size is lower for the Swainson’s Thrush than for the other species because we used data only from the two April sampling periods, as explained in the Methods.
** The denominator df used in the calculation of the F-statistic is computed with the containment technique (SAS Institute 2006) that will vary with different response and explanatory variables.
* The Intercept estimates represent the additive effects of the intercepts and the effects of the classes with zeroes, e.g. in the case of Chestnut-sided Warblers the intercept estimate is the additive effect of the intercept and the plantation class. The other estimates (for control, island, April, and February classes) are the differences between the effects of these classes and the intercept plus plantation or plus November effect within a species.
** The P-values show whether there were significant differences between the class and the intercept plus plantation or intercept plus November effect. For example, for the Tennessee Warbler, the number of captures was significantly different between April and November but not between February and November.
Migrant assemblage patterns
We captured 478 migrants of 25 species during 3,858 mist-net hours. The fewest captures occurred in control treatments (15.7%), 26.6% were in islands, and 57.7% were in plantations. Fifteen species were captured in the controls, 19 species in the islands, and 24 species in the plantations (Table 3). Species classified in the open category were captured in controls 29 times, in islands 39 times, and in plantations 40 times. Species in the mixed category were captured more frequently in plantations (63.0% of captures) than islands (24.1%) or controls (12.9%, n = 349). Species in the woody category were captured most frequently in plantations (76.2% of captures), and less frequently in islands (19.0%) or controls (4.8%, n = 21, Table 3).
* Species were classified based on previous descriptions of their wintering habitats and substrates (see references in Methods section). Open = species that primarily use open habitat and little woody vegetation, mixed = species that use both open and forested habitats and woody substrates, woody = species that primarily use forested habitats and woody vegetation (Table 3).
** Con = Control, Isl = Island, Plan = Plantation.
*** The majority of individuals were Empidonax flaviventris. A few individuals were difficult to identify definitively.
Three species on the Birds of Conservation Concern List (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2008) were captured: Golden-winged Warbler Vermivora chrysoptera, Worm-eating Warbler Helmitheros vermivorus, and Kentucky Warbler Oporornis formosus (Table 3).
Recaptures
Chestnut-sided Warblers were recaptured 16 times (12 individuals). Mourning Warblers were recaptured 16 times (13 individuals) and Tennessee Warblers six times (six individuals). Swainson’s Thrushes were never recaptured. No individuals were recaptured in a different site from where they were originally captured. The majority of Chestnut-sided, Mourning, and Tennessee Warbler recaptures were within the same treatments where they were originally captured (70.6%, 81.3%, and 50% respectively). The majority of Chestnut-sided Warbler recaptures were of birds captured and recaptured in plantations, as were half of Tennessee Warbler recaptures. Mourning Warbler captures and recaptures were more mixed by treatment. Approximately one third of Chestnut-sided Warbler recaptures were across winters as were one quarter of Mourning Warbler recaptures. One half of Tennessee Warbler recaptures were across winters.
Discussion
Treatment and vegetation height effects
Increasing interest and effort in tropical forest restoration (Chazdon Reference Chazdon2008) provide the opportunity to improve limited knowledge of migrant wintering habitat use (Faaborg et al. Reference Faaborg, Holmes, Anders, Bildstein, Dugger, Gauthreaux, Heglund, Hobson, Jahn, Johnson, Latta, Levey, Marra, Merkord, Nol, Rothstein, Sherry, Sillett, Thompson and Warnock2010). As predicted, captures for Chestnut-sided Warblers, Tennessee Warblers and Swainson’s Thrushes, all species that use woody vegetation, were significantly higher in plantation treatments than other treatments. We captured other migrant species in lower numbers, precluding statistical analyses. These data indicate a similar positive effect of plantation-style planting for species including Yellow-bellied Flycatcher Empidonax flaviventris, Wilson’s Warbler Wilsonia pusilla and Philadelphia Vireo Vireo philadelphicus. For others, like Rose-breasted Grosbeak Pheucticus ludovicianus, captures were approximately equal in all treatments. No species appeared to prefer control or island treatments, indicating that plantations did not deter species that use non-woody vegetation, at least at this stage of recovery (within 1−4 years of planting). In addition, more migrant species were captured in plantations compared to the other treatments and captures of migrants classified in the woody category were concentrated in plantations. We emphasise that the restoration treatments are young and that, at the current stage, likely do not provide optimal habitat for most migrants. However, the results indicate that planting seedlings in plantations, rather than islands, more rapidly converts pasture into usable habitat for a variety of migrant species.
The number of migrant species and individuals captured in islands was greater than in controls, indicating that planting in islands produced habitat that was perceived by some migrant species as more attractive than controls, which were similar to active and recently abandoned pasture. This result provides some support for the idea that island planting may be a useful alternative to plantation-style planting (Rey Benayas et al. Reference Rey Benayas, Bullock and Newton2008), particularly when financial resources are limited. However, our results do not support the idea that islands are as ecologically effective in providing migrant habitat, at least at this stage in the restoration process. Plantation planting appeared to more quickly jump-start the process of developing migrant habitat although areas planted in islands may rapidly catch up.
Vegetation height influenced capture rates only of Mourning Warblers. Mourning Warblers use scrubby winter habitats (Stiles and Skutch Reference Stiles and Skutch1989) so it is somewhat surprising that they were more abundant in high-vegetation sites, which we classified based on woody vegetation. However, high-vegetation sites (all planted in 2004) also had the densest non-woody understorey in the last year of the study, because of the cessation of clearing, apparently making them more attractive to Mourning Warblers. We do not suggest there was no influence of vegetation height on the other species; three of the low sites had few captures. However, the focal species were captured in sites from both of the height categories. This variability may have obscured other patterns.
Landscape and seasonal effects
Landscape forest cover did not influence capture rates of any of the focal species. The focal species may be flexible enough to use or, at least, pass through the land cover types in the study region. In addition, there may be enough arboreal features (Sekercioglu et al. Reference Sekercioglu, Loarie, Brenes, Ehrlich and Daily2007), even in low forest cover landscapes, to support the movements of species like Chestnut-sided Warblers.
Swainson’s Thrushes showed a strong pattern as a passage migrant in April. Tennessee Warblers were infrequently captured in April, the majority apparently having already left the study region to begin their migration north. These patterns seem to reflect large-scale movements and species-specific timing of migration, rather that responses to local-scale conditions.
The capture results do not take into account potential differences in detectability in the different planting designs. However, observational data also suggested that controls were used infrequently by migrants (Lindell unpubl. data) and we expected mist-net captures to be at least as likely in control treatments as the other treatments, given the relatively low lack of cover and thus impetus to move. Thus, our results are likely to be conservative with regard to the greater use of plantations by migrants.
Value of restoration sites
Restoration studies commonly involve planting plots of the sizes considered in this study (e.g. Chapman and Chapman Reference Chapman and Chapman1999, Zahawi and Augspurger Reference Zahawi and Augspurger2006) and birds exhibit preferences and differential use of patches of habitat at this and smaller scales (Suhonen Reference Suhonen1993, Butler et al. Reference Butler, Whittingham, Quinn and Cresswell2005, Fink et al. Reference Fink, Lindell, Morrison, Zahawi and Holl2009, Leyequién et al. Reference Leyequién, de Boer and Toledo2010). The recapture data indicate that, for the warbler species, individuals were not merely passing through the planting treatments but using them regularly, with a number of individuals returning to the same treatments in consecutive years. Thus, although the restoration sites likely do not represent the entire foraging range of individual wintering migrants, the availability of restored habitat patches may influence how long and to what extent migrants use a larger wintering area. Our results indicate that 1) planting even relatively small areas with woody seedlings increases the usability of a site for many wintering migrants and 2) planting areas continuously, plantation-style, further enhances the attractiveness of sites to species that use woody vegetation. Thus, we recommend plantation-style planting if the majority of migrant species of conservation concern in an area use woody vegetation. Island planting is a less ecologically effective, although more cost-effective, alternative that provides usable habitat for a range of migrant species early in the restoration process. These types of planting should be considered within the context of region-wide strategies to enhance habitat for wintering migrants. Future work including migrant demographic measures would enhance our understanding of the relative value of different restoration planting designs (Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Sherry, Holmes and Marra2006).
Acknowledgements
The Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act Program of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service provided funding for the work. The Earthwatch Institute and the National Science Foundation (grant DEB 05-15577) funded set-up and maintenance of the sites. We thank Juan Abel Rosales, Kener Alvarez, Roger Mendez, Jeisson Figueroa, Allen Imana, and Pablo Rosales for field assistance. We thank the landowners who allowed us to work on their property. Emily Cohen, Sara Kaiser, Dan Linden, and Sam Riffell provided valuable comments on the manuscript.