Abstract

Although elevational patterns of species richness have been well documented, how the drivers of richness gradients vary across ecological guilds has rarely been reported. Here, we examined the effects of spatial factors (area and mid‐domain effect; MDE) and environmental factors, including metrics of climate, productivity, and plant species richness on the richness of breeding birds across different ecological guilds defined by diet and foraging strategy. We surveyed 12 elevation bands at intervals of 300 m between 1,800 and 5,400 m a.s.l using line‐transect methods throughout the wet season in the central Himalaya, China. Multiple regression models and hierarchical partitioning were used to assess the relative importance of spatial and environmental factors on overall bird richness and guild richness (i.e., the richness of species within each guild). Our results showed that richness for all birds and most guilds displayed hump‐shaped elevational trends, which peaked at an elevation of 3,300–3,600 m, although richness of ground‐feeding birds peaked at a higher elevation band (4,200–4,500 m). The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI)—an index of primary productivity—and habitat heterogeneity were important factors in explaining overall bird richness as well as that of insectivores and omnivores, with geometric constraints (i.e., the MDE) of secondary importance. Granivore richness was not related to primary production but rather to open habitats (granivores were negatively influenced by habitat heterogeneity), where seeds might be abundant. Our findings provide direct evidence that the richness–environment relationship is often guild‐specific. Taken together, our study highlights the importance of considering how the effects of environmental and spatial factors on patterns of species richness may differ across ecological guilds, potentially leading to a deeper understanding of elevational diversity gradients and their implications for biodiversity conservation.

Highlights

  • Elevational changes in species diversity and composition have long been of interest to ecologists and naturalists (Lomolino, 2001)

  • The overall bird richness and guild richness were determined by very different factors, which support our second predictions that granivores and ground‐feeding species are more abundant in open habitats, whereas insectivores and omnivores are likely to be associated with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI)

  • We found the hump‐shaped patterns of elevational diversity gradients are generally congruence across bird guilds that peaked at different elevation bands and were explained by divergent spatial and environmental factors

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Elevational changes in species diversity and composition have long been of interest to ecologists and naturalists (Lomolino, 2001). The MDE indicated that spatial boundaries would result in greater overlaps in species ranges toward the center of an area and maximum diversity at the middle elevation of a mountain (Colwell & Lees, 2000) Both the climate–richness relationship and productivity–richness relationship were proposed to explain the association between richness and the environment (e.g., McCain, 2007, 2009, 2010; McCain & Grytnes 2010). Given that different guilds have unique resource requirements and environmental tolerances, and have been found to respond more strongly to specific factors (as seen above), we tested the following predictions: (a) total avian richness and the richness of each guild should have hump‐shaped patterns as a result of the intermediate elevations possibly being the transition zones between different vegetation types which could support more species; (b) the richness of granivores and ground‐feeding species should increase with habitat openness, while the richness of insectivores and omnivores should be most strongly associated with NDVI, an index of primary productivity

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
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