Literature DB >> 26842573

High proportion of smaller ranged hummingbird species coincides with ecological specialization across the Americas.

Jesper Sonne1, Ana M Martín González2, Pietro K Maruyama3, Brody Sandel4, Jeferson Vizentin-Bugoni3, Matthias Schleuning5, Stefan Abrahamczyk6, Ruben Alarcón7, Andréa C Araujo8, Francielle P Araújo9, Severino Mendes de Azevedo10, Andrea C Baquero11, Peter A Cotton12, Tanja Toftemark Ingversen13, Glauco Kohler14, Carlos Lara15, Flor Maria Guedes Las-Casas16, Adriana O Machado17, Caio Graco Machado18, María Alejandra Maglianesi19, Alan Cerqueira Moura20, David Nogués-Bravo11, Genilda M Oliveira21, Paulo E Oliveira17, Juan Francisco Ornelas22, Licléia da Cruz Rodrigues23, Liliana Rosero-Lasprilla24, Ana Maria Rui25, Marlies Sazima26, Allan Timmermann4, Isabela Galarda Varassin27, Zhiheng Wang28, Stella Watts29, Jon Fjeldså11, Jens-Christian Svenning4, Carsten Rahbek30, Bo Dalsgaard11.   

Abstract

Ecological communities that experience stable climate conditions have been speculated to preserve more specialized interspecific associations and have higher proportions of smaller ranged species (SRS). Thus, areas with disproportionally large numbers of SRS are expected to coincide geographically with a high degree of community-level ecological specialization, but this suggestion remains poorly supported with empirical evidence. Here, we analysed data for hummingbird resource specialization, range size, contemporary climate, and Late Quaternary climate stability for 46 hummingbird-plant mutualistic networks distributed across the Americas, representing 130 hummingbird species (ca 40% of all hummingbird species). We demonstrate a positive relationship between the proportion of SRS of hummingbirds and community-level specialization, i.e. the division of the floral niche among coexisting hummingbird species. This relationship remained strong even when accounting for climate, furthermore, the effect of SRS on specialization was far stronger than the effect of specialization on SRS, suggesting that climate largely influences specialization through species' range-size dynamics. Irrespective of the exact mechanism involved, our results indicate that communities consisting of higher proportions of SRS may be vulnerable to disturbance not only because of their small geographical ranges, but also because of their high degree of specialization.
© 2016 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  biogeography; climate gradients; macroecology; mutualistic networks; range size; specialization

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26842573      PMCID: PMC4760165          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2015.2512

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


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