The impact of abandoned/disused marble quarries on avifauna in the anticline of Estremoz, Portugal: does quarrying add to landscape biodiversity?
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Abstract
Although the extractive operations of quarrying are often considered
environmental threats, there is some evidence that abandoned quarries may
have a significant positive impact on biodiversity by enhancing habitat quality
for several species. In Estremoz Anticlinal, SE Portugal, many of the existing
marble quarries have been inactive for decades and were abandoned without
any restoration project in progress. The impact of quarry abandonment
on avifauna diversity was assessed relative to reference conditions using
adjacent rural fields as control areas. No significant differences were found
in within-community diversity (alpha diversity) between abandoned quarries
and reference sites. However, several dissimilarity indices showed a clear
divergence in species composition between abandoned quarries and
reference sites. Furthermore, statistically significant differences in species
compositions were found between quarries abandoned for different periods.
Over time, species composition becomes more similar to that observed in
reference sites, reflecting ecological succession and landscape resilience
to quarrying. Nevertheless, the studied quarrying landscape exhibited
higher gamma and beta diversity than the former traditional landscape;
thus, our results suggest that abandoned quarries, rather than damaging
and destroying niches, can promote new ecological niches and significantly
diversify rural landscapes.
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Germano, David; Machado, Rui; Godinho, Sérgio; Santos, Pedro. The impact of abandoned/disused marble quarries on avifauna in the anticline of Estremoz, Portugal: does quarrying add to landscape biodiversity?, Landscape Research, 41, 8, 880-891, 2016.