Journal article

The abundance of hollow-bearing trees in urban dry sclerophyll forest and the effect of wind on hollow development

MJ Harper, MA McCarthy, R Van Der Ree

Biological Conservation | ELSEVIER SCI LTD | Published : 2005

Abstract

Anthropogenic change, particularly in urban landscapes, has resulted in the fragmentation of indigenous vegetation into often small isolated 'remnants'. The persistence of arboreal fauna in small urban remnants in part depends on the distribution and abundance of habitat resources within the remnant. We surveyed 44 small (80 cm DBH) trees in small urban remnants. We found that variables that measured exposure to wind were correlated with the chance that a live tree will be hollow-bearing while reducing the chance that a dead tree will be hollow-bearing. Although highly variable, the number of hollow-bearing trees contained within small urban remnants (mean of 5.8 ha-1) fell well below that c..

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