4.6 Article

Neotropical mixed-species bird flocks in a community context

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0104

Keywords

tropics; functional traits; elevational gradients; interactions; Andes

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Mixed-species flocks are an important part of bird communities, especially in the Neotropics. The functional aspects of these flocks and their relationship with the larger avian community across different elevations are not well understood. This study uses a trait-based approach to examine the functional characteristics of flocking species and their communities. The results reveal similar ecological strategies among flocking species and the communities they occur in. The trait space occupied by flocking species is only half that of the larger community, and the trait space of flocks is more restricted across elevations compared to non-flocking species.
Mixed-species flocks are an important component of bird communities, particularly in the Neotropics, where flocks reach their highest diversity. The extent to which mixed-species flocks represent unique functional or ecological roles within communities, and how these attributes change over environmental gradients, however, is not well understood. We use a trait-based approach to examine functional aspects of flocking assemblages as they relate to those observed in the larger avian community across a 3000 m elevational gradient. Our results reveal similar ecological strategies among flocking species and the communities in which they occur, at the scale of the regional pool and across elevations. Trait variation in flocking and non-flocking assemblages is structured along two major axes defined by size- and resource-related traits. The trait space occupied by flocking species, however, represents only half (51%) that of the larger community. Similarly, the trait space of flocks across elevations is restricted compared to non-flocking species. The shared trait space across flock types represents small-bodied invertivores foraging in lower forest strata, traits associated with increased vulnerability to predation. The concentration of flocking species in functional trait space suggests high niche packing and either more overlap in ecological strategies or more finely divided niches relative to non-flocking species. This article is part of the theme issue 'Mixed-species groups and aggregations: shaping ecological and behavioural patterns and processes'.

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