Habitat creation and management within wooded networks is a potentially effective strategy to reduce ecological isolation and the deleterious effects of fragmentation. However, questions remain over the relative advantages of different approaches, e.g. buffering patches vs. increasing connectivity. Potential effects of woodland fragmentation include reduction in regional woodland cover, reduced patch size, edge effects with loss of core habitat, and increased isolation with disruption of dispersal and metapopulation dynamics. We adopt an evidence-based approach to review how each of these affects woodland birds with an emphasis on studies from the UK and use this to identify management priorities for mitigation. There is evidence for both p...
1. Recent declines in woodland birds in Britain have been linked to increasing habitat fragmentation...
In fragmented temperate landscapes, species responses to patch and landscape structures are likely t...
In agricultural landscapes, the habitat of many species is subject to fragmentation. When the habita...
Habitat creation and management within wooded networks is a potentially effective strategy to reduce...
Global land-use change and industrialisation has driven biodiversity declines and impaired ecosystem...
Capsule: Smaller woodlands not only support fewer species but also show different avian community co...
Ecosystem function and resilience are compromised when habitats become fragmented due to land-use ch...
Hedges and forest edges play a major role in providing nesting sites, food resources and shelter for...
Over the last 30 years, ecological networks have been deployed to reduce global biodiversity loss by...
Factors such as early fledging and natal territory location have been shown to influence dispersal a...
It is generally assumed that large patches of natural habitat are better for the survival of species...
The development of ecological networks could help reverse the effects of habitat fragmentation on wo...
Forests are of great value to many bird species, especially neotropical migrants. However, in urbani...
Context: In agricultural landscapes, small woodland patches can be important wildlife refuges. Their...
A major conservation challenge in mosaic landscapes is to understand how trait-specific responses to...
1. Recent declines in woodland birds in Britain have been linked to increasing habitat fragmentation...
In fragmented temperate landscapes, species responses to patch and landscape structures are likely t...
In agricultural landscapes, the habitat of many species is subject to fragmentation. When the habita...
Habitat creation and management within wooded networks is a potentially effective strategy to reduce...
Global land-use change and industrialisation has driven biodiversity declines and impaired ecosystem...
Capsule: Smaller woodlands not only support fewer species but also show different avian community co...
Ecosystem function and resilience are compromised when habitats become fragmented due to land-use ch...
Hedges and forest edges play a major role in providing nesting sites, food resources and shelter for...
Over the last 30 years, ecological networks have been deployed to reduce global biodiversity loss by...
Factors such as early fledging and natal territory location have been shown to influence dispersal a...
It is generally assumed that large patches of natural habitat are better for the survival of species...
The development of ecological networks could help reverse the effects of habitat fragmentation on wo...
Forests are of great value to many bird species, especially neotropical migrants. However, in urbani...
Context: In agricultural landscapes, small woodland patches can be important wildlife refuges. Their...
A major conservation challenge in mosaic landscapes is to understand how trait-specific responses to...
1. Recent declines in woodland birds in Britain have been linked to increasing habitat fragmentation...
In fragmented temperate landscapes, species responses to patch and landscape structures are likely t...
In agricultural landscapes, the habitat of many species is subject to fragmentation. When the habita...