4.5 Article

Climate-driven variation in dispersal ability predicts responses to forest fragmentation in birds

Journal

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
Volume 7, Issue 7, Pages 1079-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41559-023-02077-x

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A study shows that species' sensitivities to habitat fragmentation vary with latitude, with the highest sensitivity in tropical regions. This variation is mainly due to differences in species' dispersal abilities and is also influenced by historical habitat disturbance and climatic factors. Therefore, environmental policies should take into account local context and associated species traits.
Species sensitivity to forest fragmentation varies latitudinally, peaking in the tropics. A prominent explanation for this pattern is that historical landscape disturbance at higher latitudes has removed fragmentation-sensitive species or promoted the evolution of more resilient survivors. However, it is unclear whether this so-called extinction filter is the dominant driver of geographic variation in fragmentation sensitivity, particularly because climatic factors may also cause latitudinal gradients in dispersal ability, a key trait mediating sensitivity to habitat fragmentation. Here we combine field survey data with a morphological proxy for avian dispersal ability (hand-wing index) to assess responses to forest fragmentation in 1,034 bird species worldwide. We find that fragmentation sensitivity is strongly predicted by dispersal limitation and that other factors-latitude, body mass and historical disturbance events-have relatively limited explanatory power after accounting for species differences in dispersal. We also show that variation in dispersal ability is only weakly predicted by historical disturbance and more strongly associated with intra-annual temperature fluctuations (seasonality). Our results suggest that climatic factors play a dominant role in driving global variation in the impacts of forest fragmentation, emphasizing the need for more nuanced environmental policies that take into account local context and associated species traits. Field survey data from 1,034 bird species worldwide are used to show that species' sensitivities to habitat fragmentation are more strongly related to their dispersal ability than to latitude and past habitat disturbance, and that variation in dispersal ability is in turn strongly associated with climate.

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