Abstract

El Niño and La Niña climatic oscillations have dramatic effects on population dynamics and community structure of different animals. For marine birds, El Niño phenomenon drastically increases their mortality and reduces their reproductive success. In terrestrial ecosystems, the lack of long-term longitudinal data limits our understanding of the impact of El Niño and La Niña on bird populations and communities. We analyzed changes in abundance of frugivorous (large, medium, and small) and nectarivorous birds on three tropical forest types (lowland, premontane and montane) during El Niño, La Niña and neutral years using data from 16 Christmas’ Bird Counts in Costa Rica. Abundance of large and medium size frugivores increased during La Niña events, and the abundance of nectarivores during El Niño in the lowland forest, but neither of these events affected the abundance of small frugivores. In the montane forest, abundance of all four bird groups increased during El Niño, but decreased during La Niña events. Abundance of large, and small frugivores increased in the premontane forest during La Niña events, but other bird groups were not affected by La Niña. The abundance of small frugivores also increased during El Niño. We hypothesize that changes in abundance of frugivores and nectarivores during La Niña and El Niño events is probably correlated with fluctuations in food resources as it has been reported for other terrestrial tropical ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Lowland rain forest: We tested the effect of weather events on the abundance of 17 large frugivorous (LF), 27 medium size frugivorous (MF), 36 small frugivorous (SF), and 12 nectarivorous (Nc) bird species in the lowland forest (Table S1)

  • Abundance of SF was not affected by La Niña or El Niño events; nor El Niño affected significantly the abundance in any of the three

  • The variation in the abundance of frugivorous and nectarivorous birds detected in this study could be the result of temporal and spatial changes in the phenology of flowering and fruiting species caused by El Niño and La Niña events

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Summary

Introduction

Species often adjust the timing of molting, migration and reproduction to fluctuations in food resourses, which in turn respond to predictable, seasonal climatic changes (Stiles, 1985; Loiselle & Blake, 1991; Worthington, 1996) Unpredictable climatic anomalies such as El Niño Southern Oscillation (hereafter El Niño) and presumably La Niña phenomenon, have a strong impact on survivorship and reproduction in many bird populations, and affect the community structure (Grant & Grant, 1983; Stiles, 1992; Jaksic & Laso, 1999). Our main objective here is to test the effect of El Niño and La Niña events on the abundance of terrestrial bird populations in three different forest types in Costa Rica. Thereby, we expect contrasting results on bird abundance among forest types since the effect of El Niño could affect differently each forest

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