4.7 Article

High sensitivity of tropical forest birds to deforestation at lower altitudes

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3867

Keywords

avian community; elevational gradients; forest conversion; montane tropics; tropical conservation

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Habitat conversion is a major driver of tropical biodiversity loss, but its effects in montane environments are unclear. This study on Colombian Andes found that lower elevation bird species are strongly impacted by nearby forest loss, while higher elevation species are relatively unaffected. There was limited evidence of within-species elevational gradients in sensitivity to forest loss. Overall, biodiversity response to habitat loss appears to be driven by interspecific differences in sensitivity rather than proximity to climatic thresholds.
Habitat conversion is a major driver of tropical biodiversity loss, but its effects are poorly understood in montane environments. While community-level responses to habitat loss display strong elevational dependencies, it is unclear whether these arise via elevational turnover in community composition and interspecific differences in sensitivity or elevational variation in environmental conditions and proximity to thermal thresholds. Here we assess the relative importance of inter- and intraspecific variation across the elevational gradient by quantifying how 243 forest-dependent bird species vary in sensitivity to landscape-scale forest loss across a 3000-m elevational gradient in the Colombian Andes. We find that species that live at lower elevations are strongly affected by loss of forest in the nearby landscape, while those at higher elevations appear relatively unperturbed, an effect that is independent of phylogeny. Conversely, we find limited evidence of intraspecific elevational gradients in sensitivity, with populations displaying similar sensitivities to forest loss, regardless of where they exist in a species' elevational range. Gradients in biodiversity response to habitat loss thus appear to arise via interspecific gradients in sensitivity rather than proximity to climatically limiting conditions.

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