Creating benchmark measurements of tropical forest bird communities in large plots

IF 2.6 2区 生物学 Q1 ORNITHOLOGY
Condor Pub Date : 2020-04-15 DOI:10.1093/condor/duaa015
W. Robinson, J. Curtis
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

ABSTRACT An understanding of how tropical bird communities might respond to climate change and other types of environmental stressors seems particularly urgent, yet we still lack, except for a few sites, even snapshot inventories of avian richness and abundances across most of the tropics. Such benchmark measurements of tropical bird species richness and abundances could provide opportunities for future repeat surveys and, therefore, strong insight into degrees and pace of change in community organization over time. The challenges of creating a network of benchmarked sites include high variation in detectability among species, general rarity of many species that creates hurdles for use of modern bird counting methods aimed at controlling for variation in detectability, and lack of a standardized protocol to create repeatable inventories. We argue that reasonably complete inventories of tropical bird communities require use of multiple survey techniques to provide internal calibrations of abundance estimates and require multiple visits to improve completeness of richness inventories. We suggest that a network of large (50–100 ha) plots scattered across the tropics can also provide insights into geographic variation in and drivers of avian community structure analogous to insights provided by the Smithsonian Center for Tropical Forest Science Forest Global Earth Observatory network of forest dynamics plots. Perhaps most importantly, large plots provide opportunities for use of multiple survey techniques to estimate abundances while also using some exactly repeatable survey techniques that can greatly improve abilities to quantify change over time. We provide guidance on establishment of and survey methods for large tropical bird plots as well as important recommendations for collection and archiving of metadata to safeguard the long-term utility of valuable benchmark data.
建立大型热带森林鸟类群落的基准测量
了解热带鸟类群落如何应对气候变化和其他类型的环境压力似乎尤为迫切,但除了少数地点外,我们仍然缺乏对大多数热带地区鸟类丰富度和丰度的快照清单。这种热带鸟类物种丰富度和丰度的基准测量可以为未来的重复调查提供机会,因此可以深入了解社区组织随时间变化的程度和速度。建立基准站点网络的挑战包括:物种之间可探测性的高度差异;许多物种的普遍稀有性为使用旨在控制可探测性变化的现代鸟类计数方法创造了障碍;以及缺乏建立可重复清单的标准化协议。我们认为,合理完整的热带鸟类群落清单需要使用多种调查技术来提供丰度估算的内部校准,并需要多次访问以提高丰富度清单的完整性。我们建议,一个分布在热带地区的大型(50-100公顷)地块网络也可以提供鸟类群落结构的地理变化和驱动因素的见解,类似于史密森尼热带森林科学中心森林全球地球观测站森林动态地块网络所提供的见解。也许最重要的是,大型地块提供了使用多种调查技术来估计丰度的机会,同时也使用了一些完全可重复的调查技术,这些技术可以大大提高量化随时间变化的能力。本文对大型热带鸟类样地的建立和调查方法提供了指导,并对元数据的收集和存档提出了重要建议,以保障有价值的基准数据的长期利用。
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来源期刊
Condor
Condor ORNITHOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
46
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Condor is the official publication of the Cooper Ornithological Society, a non-profit organization of over 2,000 professional and amateur ornithologists and one of the largest ornithological societies in the world. A quarterly international journal that publishes original research from all fields of avian biology, The Condor has been a highly respected forum in ornithology for more than 100 years. The journal is one of the top ranked ornithology publications. Types of paper published include feature articles (longer manuscripts) Short Communications (generally shorter papers or papers that deal with one primary finding), Commentaries (brief papers that comment on articles published previously in The Condor), and Book Reviews.
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