Skip to main content

Rethinking Avian Response to Tamarix on the Lower Colorado River: A Threshold Hypothesis

Citation

Kristina L Paxton, Patrick B Shafroth, Chris O’Brien, and Laura J McGrath, Rethinking Avian Response to Tamarix on the Lower Colorado River: A Threshold Hypothesis: .

Summary

Many of the world’s large river systems have been greatly altered in the past century due to river regulation, agriculture, and invasion of introduced Tamarix spp. (saltcedar, tamarisk). These riverine ecosystems are known to provide important habitat for avian communities, but information on responses of birds to differing levels of Tamarix is not known. Past research on birds along the Colorado River has shown that avian abundance in general is greater in native than in non-native habitat. In this article, we address habitat restoration on the lower Colorado River by comparing abundance and diversity of avian communities at a matrix of different amounts of native and non-native habitats at National Wildlife Refuges in Arizona. [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

metadata.xml 2.84 KB text/plain

Communities

  • Upper Colorado River Basin

Tags

Provenance

From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 10:49:37 CDT 2011

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
Title Citation Rethinking Avian Response to Tamarix on the Lower Colorado River: A Threshold Hypothesis

Citation Extension

citationTypeMendeley
noteNotes
tableOfContentsTable of Contents

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...