Wetenschappelijk artikelNiche separation of wetland birds revealed from airborne laser scanning

Numerous organisms depend on the physical structure of their habitats, but incorporating such information into ecological niche analyses has been limited by the lack of adequate data over broad spatial extents. The increasing availability of high-resolution measurements from country-wide airborne laser scanning (ALS) surveys – a light detection and ranging (LiDAR) technology – now provides unprecedented opportunities for characterizing habitat structure. Here, we use country-wide ALS data in combination with presence–absence observations of birds from a national monitoring scheme in the Netherlands to quantify niche filling, niche overlap and niche separation of three closely-related wetland birds (great reed warbler, Eurasian reed warbler and Savi's warbler). We developed a workflow to derive LiDAR metrics capturing different aspects of vertical and horizontal vegetation structure and used a principal component analysis (PCA), niche equivalency and niche similarity tests to analyse the fine-scale breeding habitat niches of these warbler species in the Netherlands.

Source
Ecography
Year
2021
Number
44