| Literature DB >> 28663558 |
Federico Morelli1, Anders Pape Møller2, Emma Nelson3, Yanina Benedetti4, Wei Liang5, Petra Šímová4, Marco Moretti6, Piotr Tryjanowski7.
Abstract
Common cuckoo Cuculus canorus is a charismatic bird species with a dominant presence in human culture: from folklore legends to nowadays there is evidence of cuckoos being a prime candidate as a surrogate of bird diversity. Recent studies demonstrated that the cuckoo can predict hotspots of taxonomic diversity and functional diversity of bird communities in European countries. In this study, we demonstrated that the cuckoo is an excellent bioindicator at multi-spatial scale, extending cuckoo surrogacy from Europe to Asia. Even using three different survey methods (transect, square, point counts), comparing the new findings with results of our research in Europe, sites where the cuckoo is present were characterized by greater species richness, while the cuckoo was absent from sites with low species richness. The goodness of fit of models based on point counts ranged between 71 and 92%. Furthermore, the cuckoo population trend mirrors the average population trend and climate suitability of overall bird communities in Europe. The common cuckoo is therefore a suitable intercontinental bioindicator of hotspots of bird richness, even under climate change scenarios or in areas where the species co-occurs with other cuckoo species, opening a new avenue for standardized citizen science on bird biodiversity surveys worldwide.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28663558 PMCID: PMC5491505 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-04794-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Comparison of average bird species richness between sample sites where cuckoos were present (red boxes) or absent (grey boxes) in twelve European and Asian countries. The box plots show medians, quartiles, 5- and 95-percentiles and extreme values. The map was generated with GIS soſtware (ArcGIS 10.1)[57] with geographical background using data available under the Open Database Licence (“© OpenStreetMap and contributors”; cartography licensed as CC BY-SA) http://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright.
Fixed-effect parameters in a Generalized Linear Mixed Model, accounting for cuckoo occurrence in relation to bird species richness (taxonomic diversity), in ten European and two Asian countries.
| Variables | Estimate | CI | SE | z | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | −3.197 | −4.443/−1.952 | 0.635 | −5.033 | <0.05 |
| Bird species richness | 0.150 | 0.134/0.167 | 0.008 | 18.081 | <0.05 |
The full model is based on 3592 sample sites. Random effects: Country (groups = 12) and dominant environment (groups = 5). CI: confidence interval (lower/upper); SE: standard error.
Figure 2Predictive performance of models using bird species richness as a surrogate of cuckoo occurrence in twelve European and Asian countries. The height of the histogram columns represents the values of the area under the curve (AUC), that is the goodness of fit measure used in this study, indicating how well the model fits a set of observations.
Linear regression models based on data from European countries, accounting for cuckoo abundance trend and cuckoo climate suitability trend (CST) in relation to the same measeures for all bird populations in nineteen selected countries.
| Predictors/Response | Estimate | CI | SE | Z | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| (Intercept) | 0.002 | −0.001/0.005 | 0.001 | 1.268 | 0.221 |
| Overall bird abundance trend | 0.285 | 0.150/0.419 | 0.064 | 4.461 | <0.05 |
|
| |||||
| (Intercept) | 0.005 | −0.0005/0.010 | 0.002 | 1.918 | 0.072 |
| Overall bird CST | 1.032 | 0.423/1.641 | 0.288 | 3.576 | <0.05 |
The bird population trends and bird climate suitability trend in Europe were taken from Stephens et al.[14]. The full models were based on 19 countries. CI: confidence interval (lower/upper); SE: standard error. Only significant variables are shown in the table.
Figure 3Correlation between cuckoo population trend and overall trend of bird populations (left panel) and cuckoo climate suitability trend (CST) and overall CST of birds (right panel) in ten European countries. The bird population trends and bird CST in Europe were obtained from Stephens et al.[14]. The lines are linear regression lines and 95% confidence intervals.
Summary of survey methodology, number of sample sites, rate of occurrence of common cuckoo and source of data (published or unpublished) for 12 countries where observations of common cuckoos were collected.
| Country | Survey method | Sample sites | Rate presence/absence (%) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Czech Republic | transect | 101 | 35.6 |
|
| France | square | 1153 | 76.2 |
|
| Finland | point count | 158 | 63.9 | This study |
| Greece | point count | 285 | 12.0 |
|
| Switzerland | point count | 115 | 17.4 |
|
| Ukraine | point count | 258 | 50.4 | This study |
| Poland | point count | 332 | 50.0 | This study |
| Japan | point count | 400 | 2.2 | This study |
| San Marino | point count | 250 | 22.8 | This study |
| Italy | point count | 287 | 12.0 |
|
| Denmark | point count | 48 | 50.0 | This study |
| China | point count | 205 | 2.0 | This study |