Farms with natural landscape features provide sanctuary for some Costa Rica rainforest birds

Authored by apnews.com and submitted by Ambitious-Radish8421

Small farms with natural landscape features such as shade trees, hedgerows and tracts of intact forest provide a refuge for some tropical bird populations, according to an 18-year study in Costa Rica.

For almost two decades, ornithologist James Zook has been collecting detailed records on nearly 430 tropical bird species found on small farms, plantations and undisturbed forests in the country.

While birds thrive the most in undisturbed rainforests, Zook said some species usually found in forests can establish populations in “diversified farms” that partially mimic a natural forest environment.

“How you farm matters,” said Nicholas Hendershot, a Stanford University ecologist and co-author of the study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“In these diversified farms, you see growth over the long term in bird species with specialized needs,” such as safe and shady nooks to build nests and a variety of food sources, Hendershot said.

That trend was “in stark contrast to what we saw in intensive agriculture,” or monocrop pineapple and banana plantations, he said.

The findings may seem intuitive, but Natalia Ocampo-Penuela, a University of California, Santa Cruz conservation ecologist not involved in the study, said it’s extremely rare to have detailed long-term data from tropical regions to show that varied farming landscapes can sustain some forest bird populations.

“With 18 years of data, you can show the species is persisting in that area, not simply passing by,” she said.

Three-quarters of the 305 species found in diversified farms showed stable or growing populations over the time of study. These include the collared aracari, a small toucan-like bird, with a yellow chest and enormous beak, as well as several members of the manakin family — small brightly colored forest birds known for elaborate courtship dances.

“It’s a huge contribution to have documented that some birds aren’t just going there, but staying there and populations are growing,” said Ruth Bennett, an ecologist at the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, who was not involved in the research.

Still, such habitat sanctuaries don’t offset overall population losses from the conversion of primary forests to plantations, the authors stressed. “A pineapple plantation is like a ‘bird desert’ here,” said Zook.

Increasingly, scientists say conserving species will require paying attention to landscapes with a human footprint — not just untouched areas.

“Modern conservation has to happen not only inside the fences of protected areas, but within agricultural areas and even urban areas, where there’s potential habitat for at least some species,” said the University of California’s Ocampo-Penuela.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Helpful_guy on September 5th, 2023 at 06:52 UTC »

I did a case study on sustainability in Costa Rica as part of my degree and can say with confidence they're doing everything "right" there to take care of what they have.

Something like 70% of their land is protected in some way, whether by virtue of being national parks or otherwise, and the large scale monoculture ag of the developed world never really took off there (save for all the Dole pineapple/banana plantations that shouldn't even be there).

We spent several days at a "coffee" farm, coffee in quotes because even though their biggest crop is coffee they still grow pretty much everything. Farmers there feed their surrounding villages, and plant a wide variety of crops in strategic layouts, leveraging everything mentioned in the article to their advantage.

On top of all that they're also set to have all their national energy needs met by 100% renewables again this year, and they spend what WOULD be their military budget on nationalized healthcare AND education instead.

Truly a remarkably special place.

FarthingWoodAdder on September 5th, 2023 at 02:10 UTC »

Nature adapts

PineappleProstate on September 5th, 2023 at 00:27 UTC »

That's a dinosaur and you can't tell me otherwise