Urban Ecosyst
DOI 10.1007/s11252-014-0370-3
Birds of a neotropical green city: an up-to-date review
of the avifauna of the city of Xalapa with additional
unpublished records
Fernando González-Garcia · Robert Straub
José A. Lobato García · Ian MacGregor-Fors
José A. Lobato García · Ian MacGregor-Fors
©Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014
Abstract. Although urbanization poses severe threats to biodiversity, some wildlife
groups manage to thrive within urban areas. Among wildlife, birds are a highly
diverse, charismatic and well-known group, establishing complex communities in
human settlements around the world, making them suitable bioindicators. However,
it is often difficult to have historical species lists that allow understanding current
urban ecology trends. In this paper, we compile the available bird records, including
unpublished information, for one of the best studied and well vegetated urban areas in
México: the city of Xalapa. We gathered records for 329 species, representing ~30 %
of the national avifauna in this medium-sized neotropical city. This important avian
diversity in the city of Xalapa is mostly due to its environmental heterogeneity,
underlining the relevance of its location, and the nature of its surroundings. The
information provided in this paper will not only provide an environmental education
baseline and represent a starting point for ornithologists, but will represent a reference
document on the birds that have been recorded within the limits of Xalapa in the last
three decades.
Información adicional con Fernando González-Garcia.
Información adicional con Fernando González-Garcia.
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