| Literature DB >> 36243729 |
Devin R de Zwaan1, Davide Scridel2, Tomás A Altamirano3,4, Pranav Gokhale5, R Suresh Kumar5, Steven Sevillano-Ríos6,7, Arnaud G Barras8,9, Libertad Arredondo-Amezcua10, Addisu Asefa11,12, Ricardo A Carrillo7, Ken Green13, Carlos A Gutiérrez-Chávez10, Aleksi Lehikoinen14, Shaobin Li15, Ruey-Shing Lin16, Christopher J Norment17, Krista N Oswald18,19, Alexey A Romanov20,21, Julio Salvador7, Kerry A Weston22, Kathy Martin23,24.
Abstract
Alpine ecosystems represent varied climates and vegetation structures globally, with the potential to support rich and functionally diverse avian communities. High mountain habitats and species are under significant threat from climate change and other anthropogenic factors. Yet, no global database of alpine birds exists, with most mountain systems lacking basic information on species breeding in alpine habitats, their status and trends, or potential cryptic diversity (i.e., sub-species distributions). To address these critical knowledge gaps, we combined published literature, regional monitoring schemes, and expert knowledge from often inaccessible, data-deficient mountain ranges to develop a global list of alpine breeding bird species with their associated distributions and select ecological traits. This dataset compiles alpine breeding records for 1,310 birds, representing 12.0% of extant species and covering all major mountain regions across each continent, excluding Antarctica. The Global Alpine Breeding Bird dataset (GABB) is an essential resource for research on the ecological and evolutionary factors shaping alpine communities, as well as documenting the value of these high elevation, climate-sensitive habitats for conserving biodiversity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36243729 PMCID: PMC9569320 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01723-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 8.501
Fig. 1Location of the main mountain regions included in the dataset, with labels corresponding to descriptions in Tables 2 and 3. Colours denote different thermal belts following Korner et al.[9], with our definition of alpine habitat corresponding approximately with nival, upper alpine, lower alpine, and upper montane classifications. Not all subdivisions of the Hindu Kush-Himalayan Arc (HKH) and Tibet regions are included due to space limitations. See Tables 2 and 3 for full descriptions of each region. The raw data used to create the map originated from the Global Mountain Biodiversity Project[27,28] and were downloaded from the U.S. Geological Survey website (https://rmgsc.cr.usgs.gov/gme/)[36].
Comparison of the Global Alpine Breeding Bird dataset (GABB) to other existing global-scale trait databases.
| GABB | Tobias | Sheard | Bird | Scholer | Jetz | Wilman | Jetz | La Sorte & Jetz (2010) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alpine breeding | X | ||||||||
| High elevation | X | X | |||||||
| Migration | X | X | |||||||
| Nest traits | X | ||||||||
| Endemism | X | ||||||||
| Conservation status | X | ||||||||
| Range size | X | X | X | ||||||
| Elevational range | X | X | |||||||
| Dietary guild | X | X | |||||||
| Foraging niche | X | X | |||||||
| Body size | X | X | |||||||
| Wing shape | X | X | |||||||
| Generation time | X | ||||||||
| Annual survival | X | X | |||||||
| Phylogenetic distance | X |
The GABB dataset occupies novel space in the literature with respect to alpine breeding status, ecological traits of alpine breeding populations, and traits relevant to the conservation of high elevation species. The dataset is formatted to facilitate combination with other databases, such as those represented here, to address broad-scale ecological and evolutionary questions for high mountain birds. Migration behaviour in GABB is specific to alpine breeding populations compared to Tobias et al.[21], which is generalized across elevations. See text and metadata for more details.
Description of the major regions and specific mountain ranges in the Americas that are included in the dataset.
| Mountain region | Description |
|---|---|
| | Northern British Columbia, Yukon Territory, and Alaska up to the Brooks Range at ~68°N. Includes alpine-Arctic transitional tundra between 400 and 1,000 m above sea level |
| | Rocky Mountains, Coast Mountain Range, Cascade Mountains, and Sierra Nevada. |
| | Acadian-Appalachian range and the Labrador highlands |
| | Faja Volcánica Transmexicana (Trans-Mexican Volcanic belt) |
| | Isthmian Páramo in Costa Rica and Panama |
| | Páramo; tropical wet Andes; Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador (~9°N to 4°S) |
| | |
| | ~30°S to 35°S; high Andes in Chile and Argentina |
| | Four isolated ranges in Córdoba, Argentina (31.5°S) |
| | ~35°S to 56°S; includes alpine tundra above 500 m in the far south of Chile and Argentina |
Each region is a column where confirmation of breeding in an alpine habitat is denoted by ‘1’. Latitudinal delineations of high Andean habitats were derived from Sevillano-Ríos et al.[14].
Description of the major regions and specific mountain ranges from Eurasia, Africa, and Oceania, plus the miscellaneous mountain ‘Islands’ region.
| Mountain region | Description |
|---|---|
| | Scandinavian mountains, Scottish Highlands, & Iceland |
| | Alps, Pyrenees, Apennines, Dinaric Alps, & Carpathians |
| | Greater & Lesser Caucasus ranges & the Anatolian Highlands |
| | Ural Mountains, including the high latitude Polar Urals |
| | High Atlas, Morocco; above a Juniper spp. treeline |
| | Afroalpine habitat in Ethiopia and Eritrea |
| | Primarily Mount Kilimanjaro (Tanzania), Mount Kenya (Kenya), & the Rwenzori Mountains (Uganda) |
| | |
| | Cape Fold Mountains, South Africa; primarily the Swartberg Range; highest elevation fynbos habitat. |
| | Andringitra Massif, and the Tsaratanana & Ankaratra Ranges |
| | Tian Shan mountain system, Kazakhstan |
| | Altai and Sayan ranges in Mongolia and southern Siberia. |
| | Putorana Plateau; Verkhoyansk, Chersky & Dzhugdzhur ranges east to the Sea of Okhotsk and Bering Sea |
| | Pamir Ranges on the western boundary of the Tibetan Plateau |
| | The Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau |
| | Southeastern and eastern extensions from the Tibetan Plateau |
| | Runs along the border of Afghanistan & NW Pakistan to SE Tajikistan |
| | Extends along an arc through Pakistan, India (Jammu & Kashmir in the west to Arunachal Pradesh in the east), Nepal, & Bhutan |
| | Mountain range running parallel to & north of the Himalayas; consists of desert steppe and dry scrub |
| | The Japanese Alps in the central Honshu province |
| | Central Mountain & Hsüeh-shan ranges |
| | Snowy Mountains in southeastern Australia |
| | Central Highlands |
| | Central Volcanic Plateau on the North Island, the Southern Alps & the northwest ranges on the South Island, & Stewart Island (above ~400 m) |
| | Maoke range in Papua & the New Guinea Highlands, plus scattered mountains in Papua New Guinea |
| | Primarily Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa |
| | Highest elevations on Tenerife and La Palma |
| | Mount Kinabalu, Borneo & Mount Kerinci, Sumatra |
Each region is a column where confirmation of breeding in an alpine habitat is denoted by ‘1’.
Fig. 2The median (triangular points) and range (error bars) of treeline elevation for each of the main mountain regions covered in the dataset (Fig. 1). The mountain regions are arranged from north to south (left to right) and the grey dashed line represents the relative position of the equator. Treeline elevation was derived from different sources depending on the region (see ‘Data sources’ in the dataset). The abbreviation ‘NA’, such as in ‘Northwestern NA’, refers to North America.
Fig. 3The global distribution for each trait included in the dataset, including (a–c) alpine breeding propensity, (d–f) ecological traits, and (g–i) traits relevant to conservation status and data uncertainty. In all cases except panel c the y-axis is the proportion of all 1,310 alpine breeding species identified in the dataset. Panel c depicts the elevational breeding distribution expected from the different combinations of breeding specialization and alpine breeding status to visualize the probability of breeding above treeline. In Panel e, ‘BP’ refers to brood parasite. See Table 4 or the metadata for full descriptions of each trait.
Definitions of species traits included in the Global Alpine Breeding Bird dataset.
| Trait | Trait level | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Alpine specialist; primarily breeds above treeline | ||
| Elevational generalist; breeds both above and below treeline | ||
| Breeds only in high latitude alpine and polar tundra; occurs at alpine-Arctic transition zones where species are selecting for tundra habitat | ||
| Nests in alpine across geographic range; equal to or more likely to nest in the alpine than in lower elevation habitats | ||
| Often breeds in alpine habitats, but more likely to breed at or below treeline | ||
| Incidental; alpine breeder only under localized, specific habitat conditions | ||
| Resident year-round, allowing for occasional, temporary movements in response to extreme weather or social factors (i.e., multi-species flock) | ||
| Seasonal altitudinal, nomadic, or short-distance latitudinal migrant ( < 3,000 km), but remains within general region | ||
| Involves major latitudinal shift ( > 3,000 km) and change in region (i.e., temperate to tropics) | ||
| Open cup nest | ||
| Nest placed in burrows, rock crevices, caves, or tree cavities | ||
| Nest with a roof built by the bird; globular, spherical, or semi-domed | ||
| Brood parasite; lays eggs in any of the above nest types. | ||
| On the ground, under a shrub or grass clump, or next to a rock | ||
| Cavity nest dug into the ground or a bank (i.e., a burrow/tunnel) | ||
| Placed above ground in vegetation (i.e., shrub, stunted tree, bamboo, sedge) | ||
| Placed in branches or a cavity (natural, excavated) of a stunted tree | ||
| Cliff ledge or against a vertical wall (e.g., many raptor or swallow nests) | ||
| Cavity nest placed within a natural rock cavity or crevice | ||
| Placed in a cave or crevice within a perennial ice field | ||
| Nest traits are undescribed | ||
| 1 | Less than 5 nests have been described | |
| 2 | More than 5 nests described, but only from a single population | |
| 3 | Nests described from multiple populations and regions. | |
| Species range is restricted by physical, environmental, or biological barriers to a mountainous region (e.g., endemic to Tasmania) | ||
| Same as above for recognized subspecies | ||
| Monotypic; broad distribution across multiple regions | ||
| Measurement(s) | Breeding specialization • Breeding status • Migration behaviour • Nest type • Nest site • Data reliability • Endemism • IUCN status |
| Technology Type(s) | Literature review, field monitoring, expert knowledge • Literature review, expert knowledge • Literature review • IUCN red list |
| Sample Characteristic - Organism | Aves |
| Sample Characteristic - Environment | alpine • nival |