Literature DB >> 33103837

Long-term change in the avifauna of undisturbed Amazonian rainforest: ground-foraging birds disappear and the baseline shifts.

Philip C Stouffer1,2, Vitek Jirinec1,2, Cameron L Rutt1,2,3, Richard O Bierregaard2, Angélica Hernández-Palma1,2,4, Erik I Johnson1,2,5, Stephen R Midway6, Luke L Powell1,2,7, Jared D Wolfe1,2,8, Thomas E Lovejoy2,9.   

Abstract

How are rainforest birds faring in the Anthropocene? We use bird captures spanning > 35 years from 55 sites within a vast area of intact Amazonian rainforest to reveal reduced abundance of terrestrial and near-ground insectivores in the absence of deforestation, edge effects or other direct anthropogenic landscape change. Because undisturbed forest includes far fewer terrestrial and near-ground insectivores than it did historically, today's fragments and second growth are more impoverished than shown by comparisons with modern 'control' sites. Any goals for bird community recovery in Amazonian second growth should recognise that a modern bird community will inevitably differ from a baseline from > 35 years ago. Abundance patterns driven by landscape change may be the most conspicuous manifestation of human activity, but biodiversity declines in undisturbed forest represent hidden losses, possibly driven by climate change, that may be pervasive in intact Amazonian forests and other systems considered to be undisturbed.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Amazonia; Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project; biodiversity erosion; bird communities; bird declines; climate change; community change; defaunation; rainforest; shifting baseline

Year:  2020        PMID: 33103837     DOI: 10.1111/ele.13628

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Lett        ISSN: 1461-023X            Impact factor:   9.492


  9 in total

1.  Long-term changes in avian biomass and functional diversity within disturbed and undisturbed Amazonian rainforest.

Authors:  David A Luther; W Justin Cooper; Vitek Jirinec; Jared D Wolfe; Cameron L Rutt; Richard O Bierregaard; Thomas E Lovejoy; Philip C Stouffer
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2022-08-17       Impact factor: 5.530

2.  Temporal stability in species richness but reordering in species abundances within avian assemblages of a tropical Andes conservation hot spot.

Authors:  Boris A Tinoco; Steven C Latta; Pedro X Astudillo; Andrea Nieto; Catherine H Graham
Journal:  Biotropica       Date:  2021-10-05       Impact factor: 2.858

3.  Erosion of tropical bird diversity over a century is influenced by abundance, diet and subtle climatic tolerances.

Authors:  Jenna R Curtis; W Douglas Robinson; Ghislain Rompré; Randall P Moore; Bruce McCune
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-05-11       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Morphological consequences of climate change for resident birds in intact Amazonian rainforest.

Authors:  Vitek Jirinec; Ryan C Burner; Bruna R Amaral; Richard O Bierregaard; Gilberto Fernández-Arellano; Angélica Hernández-Palma; Erik I Johnson; Thomas E Lovejoy; Luke L Powell; Cameron L Rutt; Jared D Wolfe; Philip C Stouffer
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-11-12       Impact factor: 14.136

5.  Long-term changes in populations of rainforest birds in the Australia Wet Tropics bioregion: A climate-driven biodiversity emergency.

Authors:  Stephen E Williams; Alejandro de la Fuente
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-12-22       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Long-term monitoring reveals widespread and severe declines of understory birds in a protected Neotropical forest.

Authors:  Henry S Pollock; Judith D Toms; Corey E Tarwater; Thomas J Benson; James R Karr; Jeffrey D Brawn
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-04-04       Impact factor: 12.779

7.  Diet variation in a critically endangered marine predator revealed with stable isotope analysis.

Authors:  Courtney Ogilvy; Rochelle Constantine; Sarah J Bury; Emma L Carroll
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2022-08-17       Impact factor: 3.653

8.  Disappearance of an ecosystem engineer, the white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari), leads to density compensation and ecological release.

Authors:  Andrew Whitworth; Christopher Beirne; Arianna Basto; Eleanor Flatt; Mathias Tobler; George Powell; John Terborgh; Adrian Forsyth
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2022-08-13       Impact factor: 3.298

9.  Using land-use history and multiple baselines to determine bird responses to cocoa agroforestry.

Authors:  Dominic A Martin; Estelle Raveloaritiana
Journal:  Conserv Biol       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 7.563

  9 in total

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