Hummingbird diversity in a fragmented tropical landscape in the Chocó biogeographic zone

Author:

Huh Kyu Min12ORCID,Ellis Mike1,Castillo Fernando3,Carrasco Luis3,Rivero de Aguilar Juan45,Bonaccorso Elisa67,Browne Luke38,Karubian Jordan13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Tulane University New Orleans Louisiana USA

2. Department of Zoology University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. Fundación para la Conservación de los Andes Tropicales Quito Ecuador

4. Centro Internacional Cabo de Hornos (CHIC) Puerto Williams Chile

5. Centro Universitario UMAG Cabo de Hornos Chile

6. Laboratorio de Biología Evolutiva, Colegio de Ciencias Biológicas y Ambientales Universidad de San Francisco de Quito Quito Ecuador

7. Centro de Investigación de la Biodiversidad y Cambio Climático Universidad Tecnológica Indoamérica Quito Ecuador

8. School of the Environment Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractForest loss and fragmentation drive widespread declines in biodiversity. However, hummingbirds seem to exhibit relative resilience to disturbance, characterized by increasing abundance alongside declining species richness and evenness. Yet, how widespread this pattern may be, and the mechanisms by which it may occur, remain unclear. To fill in this knowledge gap, we investigated habitat‐ and site‐level patterns of diversity, and community composition of hummingbirds between continuous forest (transects n = 16 in ~3500 ha) and more disturbed surrounding fragments (n = 39, 2.5–48.0 ha) in the Chocó rain forest of northwestern Ecuador. Next, we assessed within‐patch and patch‐matrix characteristics associated with hummingbird diversity and composition. We found higher hummingbird species richness in forest fragments relative to the continuous forest, driven by increased captures of rare species in fragments. Community composition also differed between continuous forest and fragments, with depressed evenness in fragments. Increased canopy openness and density of medium‐sized trees correlated with hummingbird diversity in forest fragments, although this relationship became nonsignificant after applying false discovery rate (p < .01). Higher species richness in fragments and higher evenness in the continuous forest highlight the complex trade‐offs involved in the conservation of this ecologically important group of birds in changing Neotropical landscapes.Abstract in Spanish is available with online material.

Funder

Disney Conservation Fund

National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka

Tulane University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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