Data in Brief (Aug 2024)

Assessing avian diversity and red squirrel occurrence in fragmented high-altitude mountain pine forests of the central French Pyrenees: A dataset of point counts

  • Michel Génard,
  • Françoise Lescourret

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 55
p. 110660

Abstract

Read online

In the spring of 1987, point-count surveys of breeding birds (passerines and picidae) were conducted, resulting in a dataset of 197 counts. The purpose was to analyze the effects of forest fragmentation on bird community composition in a mountain pine forest located in the Néouvielle National Nature Reserve in the central French Pyrenees between 1800 and 2400 metres. The study aimed to differentiate between the impacts of landscape factors (patch area, isolation) and habitat characteristics (altitude, vegetation structure). Additional information was gathered regarding the presence of Common Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra), Great Spotted Woodpecker (Dendrocopos major), Red Squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris), and Capercaillie (Tetrao urogallus) in the forest. The sampling design ensured that the selected patches represented a wide range of sizes and distances to the nearest large pine patch or low-altitude forest stand. Bird sampling utilized the point-count technique [3], focusing on singing passerines and Picidae within a 50-metre radius. The altitude, the percentage of open areas, of stones, boulders and of herbaceous and ligneous plant cover at various heights, the canopy height and number of dead trees, along with landscape variables describing patch size and isolation from large pine stands or low-altitude forests, were assessed for each point count. This dataset offers insight into the breeding bird community and squirrel occurrence in a typical high-altitude mountain pine forest in the Pyrenees in 1987, serving as a baseline for future comparisons to study changes in bird and squirrel populations, the impact of climate change, habitat fragmentation, and conservation priorities. These data aim to inspire further research and enhance our understanding of bird and squirrel ecology in mountain regions.

Keywords