21 research outputs found

    Restitution de l'atelier n°1 Amélioration continue, acquisition, intégration des connaissances et évaluation des préconisations

    No full text
    National audienceCette note correspond à un atelier tenu lors du colloque national de restitution du projet Oiseaux des bois mené conjointement par la LPO et l'ONF. Dans l'atelier, les échanges ont consisté à dresser la liste des pratiques actuelles ou projetées ayant un impact connu, projeté ou potentiel sur l'avifaune. Dans un second temps, l'accent à été porté sur les moyens pour améliorer, orienter les pratiques, à travers le suivi et la gestion adaptative. Enfin, il a été question d'améliorer la gouvernance de la gestion forestière, dans un dialogue entre gestionnaire et société, auquel des chercheurs de différentes disciplines peuvent être associé

    Mismatches between occidental designers and mobile phone users from West Africa.

    No full text
    International audienc

    Utilisation de l'habitat de chasse par les chauves-souris dans une grande forêt tempérée de chêne: importance des peuplements matures et en régénération

    No full text
    International audienceThe importance of forests as privileged roosting and feeding areas for bats is well-established. How bats select their feeding places within large forests is less documented, while we may expect bats to react on habitat features at different spatial scales. In this study, ten teams recorded bat activity with bat detectors in 101 within-stand plots on two consecutive nights in a large French oak-dominated forest. Three groups of bat species that could be distinguished by their echolocation calls were considered. Splitting bat point counts into ten consecutive 1-minute periods made it possible to simultaneously model the probability of detection and the probability of occupancy. Explanatory variables included local stand features, landscape composition features and point count features. The probability of detection varied among teams and nights for the Nyctalus-Eptesicus group, among teams and with time of count and vegetation cover for the Pipistrellus group; none of these variables influenced the probability of detection of the Myotis group. This group showed a (moderate) preference for mature woods, while the Pipistrellus and Nyctalus-Eptesicus groups preferred regeneration stands (all groups within 250-m radius disks). The latter group was also more frequent at the edge of the forest than in the interior. Our study points to the fact that imperfect detectability needs to be accounted for in bat point count data analysis and that long rotations and natural regeneration are management practices beneficial to bat diversity in managed forests, even for forest-edge species

    Le bois mort : élément structurant des communautés d'oiseaux et de chauves-souris ?

    No full text
    National audienceLe but de cette étude est d’évaluer l’influence respective de l’exploitation forestière, de la structure et du paysage sur les communautés de chiroptères et d’oiseaux en forêt exploitée et non exploitée en France. Nos résultats montrent que la richesse totale de l'avifaune et des chiroptères, la richesse des oiseaux forestiers et des chiroptères de lisière augmente faiblement avec le volume total de bois mort. La richesse des oiseaux généralistes, des omnivores et des cavicoles est légèrement plus élevée dans les forêts non exploitées. Les chiroptères glaneurs sont positivement influencés par la densité de bois mort debout. Par contre, les variables paysagères retenues n’ont que peu d’influence sur la biodiversité. Malgré des effets assez faibles, notre étude confirme l’intérêt du bois mort pour la diversité de ces groupes

    Effets de la structure forestière, de l'abandon de gestion et des caractéristiques du paysage sur les oiseaux et les chauves-souris et implications pour leur conservation

    No full text
    International audienceSustainable forest management aims to produce wood while preserving habitats for biodiversity, which is particularly challenging for vertebrates with local and landscape scale requirements, such as birds or bats. Managers need additional scientific evidence to help them balance conservative and integrative management methods. In this study, the relative influence of management abandonment, stand structure and landscape features on bird and bat communities in 14 managed and unmanaged forests in France is evaluated. Total birds and bats richness, richness for forest and threatened birds and edge-specialized bats significantly increased with total deadwood quantities. Richness of generalist, omnivorous and cavity-nesting birds was higher in unmanaged stands and richness of gleaner bats was positively influenced by the density of standing deadwood. By contrast, landscape variables had little influence on the different ecological groups but did have effects on individual species. Though the effects showed relatively limited magnitude, this study supports the value of deadwood and the importance of management abandonment for forest vertebrates. This study confirms that for integrated conservation strategies to be fully efficient they must be complemented by designating strict forest reserves because some target species groups depend on structural features found only at sufficient levels in those areas
    corecore