Long-term changes in qualitative composition of the Buzuluk Pine Forest avifauna (Orenburg Province area) based on retrospective and present-time observations

E. Barbazyuk and P. Velmovsky

Proceedings of the Zoological Institute RAS, 2024, 328(1): 3–19   ·   https://doi.org/10.31610/trudyzin/2024.328.1.3

Full text  

Abstract

We conducted a comparative analysis of qualitative composition of the Buzuluk Pine Forest avifauna, mainly based on data collected by ornithologist E.P. Knorre for the period 1928–1941, and modern observations done between 2000 and the present. Retrospective data were obtained from the now-defunct Buzuluk Bor Reserve with an area of 10 503 hectares (now Borovoye-Opytnoe Forestry in the Orenburg Province). Present-time personal avifaunistic observations (using standard methods with referring to literature sources) were carried out on an area of 49 000 hectares, both in Borovoye-Opytnoe and in several adjacent forestries that were part of the Buzuluk Bor National Park within the Orenburg Province. Comparing the historical and current bird lists, we used a relative assessment of changes in the composition of various bird groups based on the observed and expected frequencies according to the χ2 test. Long-term data on average annual temperatures and precipitation from a nearby state weather station were also used. As a result, it is shown that by now the list of birds of E.P. Knorre decreased from 153 to 109 species (28.8%). When comparing by orders, the water birds were found to be the most affected group. The number of species in orders Podicipediformes, Ciconiiformes, Gruiformes decreased by 80–100%, and it dropped by more than 50% in orders Anseriformes and Charadriiformes. There was also a slightly smaller decrease in the number of species in orders Falconiformes and Strigiformes – by about 40%. An assessment of the relative changes in various bird groups from Knorre’s list based on expected and observed frequencies showed significant differences in the portion of avifauna associated with water. It decreased between 23.5% and 9% in the group ‘Limnophiles’ (χ2 = 11.7, df = 1, p = 0.0006) and between 24.8% and 9% in the group of orders represented by waterfowl and waterbird species (χ2 = 13.4, df = 1, p = 0.0002). The change in the portion of birds of prey was statistically non-significant. The same portion assessment method did not statistically confirm the decrease in the rest ecological and order groups. Comparison of groups by occurrence status found no significant changes in the portions of all groups of birds in the past and present, but the largest reduction was recorded in the group of migrating species. The portion of migrants decreased from 8.7% to 3.0% (χ2 = 3.2, df = 1, p = 0.07, Yates corrected χ2 = 2.2, p = 0.1). A dramatic decline in group of bird species associated with wetlands was suggested to be due, among other factors, to the progressive desiccation of the Buzuluk Pine Forest, as E. Knorre himself wrote in his report. The ongoing aridization of the climate, as shown by the graph of average annual air temperatures, has been taking place since at least the 20s of the twentieth century and led to the drying-up of wetlands, and also to migration of groundwater to deeper horizons. The emerging trend towards a reduction in the portion of migrants could be explained by the fact that a number of migratory bird species, mainly ducks and waders, disappeared in the study area, and several other migrants began breeding species. In addition, large-scale fires and logging led to formation of burned wasteland areas inside the forest at the beginning of the twentieth century and also probably contributed to fragmentation and desiccation of this biome.

Key words

Buzuluk Pine Forest, changes in bird species composition, fires, climate warming, birds, Orenburg Province, wood logging, Samara Province

Submitted September 11, 2023   ·  Accepted November 20, 2023   ·  Published March 25, 2024

References

Barabashin T.O. 2001. Finds of rare bird species in Buzuluk Pine Forest. Materials for the distribution of birds in the Urals, Priuralie and Western Siberia. Materials for the distribution of birds in the Urals, Cis-Urals and Western Siberia. A collection of articles and short messages. Yekaterinburg Publishing, Yekaterinburg: 15–16. [In Russian].

Belik V.P. 2000. Birds of the steppe River Don basin: Fauna formation, anthropogenic transformation and conservation issues. RSPU Publishing House, Rostov-on-Don, 376 p. [In Russian].

Bibby C., Jones M. and Marsden S. 2000. Methods of the field expeditional surveys. Studies and survey of the birds. Conservation Union of the birds of Russia. Moscow, 186 p. [Russian translation from: Bibby C., Jones M. and Marsden S. 1998. Expedition Field Techniques Bird Surveys. Royal Geographical Society, London, 143 p.].

Chibilyov A.A. 2008. Natural conditions of the Buzuluk Pine Forest. Buzuluksk Pine Forest: ecological and economic justification of the organization of the national park. Vol. 1. Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Yekaterinburg, 187 p. [In Russian].

IUCN 2022. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Version 2022-2. Available from: https://www.iucnredlist.org (accessed May 20, 2023).

Karamzin A.N. 1901. Birds of Buguruslan and adjacent Bugulma, Buzuluk uezds, Samara gubernia and Belebey uezd, Ufa gubernia. Materials for the knowledge of the fauna and flora of the Russian Empire. Issue 5. Zoological Department. Moscow: 203–394. [In Russian].

Kin N.O. and Velmovsky P.V. 2023. The role of natural and anthropogenic factors in restoration of post-pyrogenic forest ecosystems of the Buzuluk Pine Forest. Theoretical and applied aspects of the organization, implementation and use of monitoring observations. Proceedings of the International scientific conference dedicated to the 95th birth anniversary of E.A. Sidorovich, Corresponding member of the Belarus National Academy of Sciences. Minsk: 206–210. [In Russian].

Klimentyev A.I. 2010. Buzuluk Pine Forest: soils, landscapes and factors of the geographical environment. Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Yekaterinburg, 401 p. [In Russian].

Knorre E.P. 1941. Materials on ornithofauna of the Buzuluk Nature Reserve. Qualitative inventory of birds and animals of Buzuluk Pine Forest State Reserve (1928–1941). Unpublished manuscript. Koltubanovsky village, archive of the Buzuluk Pine Forest State Reserve, folder, 21: 31–94. [In Russian].

Koblik E.A. and Arkhipov V.Yu. 2014. Fauna of birds of Northern Eurasia within the borders of the former USSR: lists of species. Moscow, 171 p. [In Russian]. Available from: https://birdsrussia.ru/about/articles/fauna-ptits-stran-severnoy-evrazii-v-granitsakhbyvshego-sssr-cpiski-vidov-/ (accessed November 17, 2023).

Krasnov M.A. 1950. Natural renewal of pine trees in connection with logging and fires. Buzuluk Pine Forest. Vol. 2. Renewal of pine trees and practical measures on forestry. Moscow; Leningrad: 3–97. [In Russian].

Kuzikov I.V. 2015. Overview of the distribution and cases of occasional flights of the Oriental cuckoo Cuculus optatus in the European Russia. The Russian journal of ornithology, 24(1107): 523–549. [In Russian].

Morozov V.V. 2017. New data on the distribution of birds in the western Orenburg Province. The Russian journal of ornithology, 26(1393): 165–172. [In Russian].

Morozov V.V. and Kornev S.V. 2010. On the avifauna of the Buzuluk Pine Forest National Park and the western Orenburg Province. Materials for the distribution of birds in the Urals, Priuralie and Western Siberia, 15: 106–112. [In Russian].

Red Data Book of the Orenburg Region. 2019. Threatened and endangered species of animals, plants and fungi. OOO Mir, Voronezh, 488 p. [In Russian].

 

© Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Last modified: March 25, 2024