Forest Loss, Habitat Fragmentation, and Their Effects on Avian Communities in Balochistan

Authors

  • Muhammad Kamran Department of Forestry and Range Management. Author
  • Rashid Rehman Muhammad Nawaz Shareef University of Agriculture Multan. Author
  • Wali Muhammad Achakzai Zoology Department University of Baluchistan Quetta. Author
  • Mehreen Akhtir The University of Agriculture Faisalabad' Pakistan Author
  • Muhammad Akram Department of forestry and range management, university of Agriculture Faisalabad Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v3i4.921

Keywords:

Juniperus excelsa, Pinus gerardiana , forest degradation, habitat fragmentation, avian diversity, edge effects, Balochistan, conservation policy, climate stress, sustainable management

Abstract

Balochistan, Pakistan's largest province, hosts globally significant relict high-altitude forests dominated by Juniperus excelsa (in Ziarat and Zarghoon) and Pinus gerardiana (Chilghoza pine in the Sulaiman Mountains, including Sherani). These semi-arid ecosystems face rapid degradation and habitat fragmentation driven by proximate factors such as fuelwood harvesting, agricultural conversion, urbanization, mining, and uncontrolled grazing, compounded by underlying climatic stresses (drought, reduced snowfall) and institutional weaknesses in governance and enforcement. This review synthesizes drivers of forest loss, quantifies fragmentation mechanisms using landscape ecology principles (edge effects extending >250 m into interiors), and examines impacts on avian communities, including resident passerines and threatened species. Fragmentation reduces core habitat, promotes nested extinctions of specialists, alters microclimates, and diminishes reproductive success, disproportionately affecting forest-dependent guilds. Despite robust legislation, implementation gaps persist. Recommendations emphasize prioritizing large core refugia, climate-resilient sustainable forest management, community engagement, and urgent quantitative remote sensing studies to inform conservation.

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Published

2025-12-31