Abstract
Tropical bird assemblages display patterns of high alpha and beta diversity and, as tropical birds exhibit strong habitat specificity, their spatial distributions are generally assumed to be driven primarily by environmental heterogeneity and interspecific interactions. However, spatial distributions of some Amazonian forest birds are also often restricted by large rivers and other large-scale topographic features, suggesting that dispersal limitation may also play a role in driving species’ turnover. In this study, we evaluated the effects of environmental characteristics, topographic and spatial variables on variation in local assemblage structure and diversity of birds in an old-growth forest in central Amazonia. Birds were mist-netted in 72 plots distributed systematically across a 10,000 ha reserve in each of three years. Alpha diversity remained stable through time, but species composition changed. Spatial variation in bird-assemblage structure was significantly related to environmental and topographic variables but not strongly related to spatial variables. At a broad scale, we found bird assemblages to be significantly distinct between two watersheds that are divided by a central ridgeline. We did not detect an effect of the ridgeline per se in driving these patterns, indicating that most birds are able to fly across it, and that differences in assemblage structure between watersheds may be due to unmeasured environmental variables or unique combinations of measured variables. Our study indicates that complex geography and landscape features can act together with environmental variables to drive changes in the diversity and composition of tropical bird assemblages at local scales, but highlights that we still know very little about what makes different parts of tropical forest suitable for different species.
Highlights
Understanding processes that drive spatio-temporal changes in species richness, abundance and composition is a central objective of community ecology
At the scale of this study, spatial differences in bird assemblages were related to environmental differences among plots and to topographic variables, such as slope and elevation, but were not related to purely spatial variables, suggesting that dispersal limitation is not operating strongly within the reserve for the majority of these birds at distances of 10 km
Despite clear differences in bird diversity and assemblage structure between eastern and western watersheds, we found no evidence to suggest an effect of the ridgeline per se on bird assemblages
Summary
Understanding processes that drive spatio-temporal changes in species richness, abundance and composition is a central objective of community ecology. Several theories have been advanced to explain how so many species can coexist in megadiverse tropical forests. INCT-CENBAM (Grant 573721/2008-4) and the Brazilian Long-Term Ecological Research Project PELD (Grant 403764/2012-2) through the Brazilian National Research Council CNPq. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript
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