Abstract

Land-use change in the Colombian Llanos due to agro-industrial expansion affects biodiversity. This change alters species occurrence probability, consequently impacting species’ composition. For some species, the occurence probability increases with land-use changes, while it stays unchanged or decreases for others. This interspecific variation in the response to land-use change may be mediated by functional traits, among other factors. We investigated response functional traits to land-use changes and their influence on the occurrence probability of bird species in the Colombian Orinoquia region. We compiled data for 13 morphological and life-history traits of 364 species recorded in forests, savannas, rice fields, palm oil crops, and livestock pastures in the piedmont and flooded savanna landscapes. We used a novel framework to identify response functional traits (i.e., traits with a significant effect on occurrence probability) through multiple statistical tests. We used random forest models to identify response functional traits to land-use change for pairwise comparisons of natural vs. agricultural land use types. For the functional traits, we estimated the influence of their states as trait attributes on species’ responses to land-use changes. We identified functional groups based on hierarchical clustering analysis. Functional groups corresponded to different levels of response, that is, different changes in probability occurrence. Land-use changes altered the multidimensional space of bird traits (i.e., functional diversity), implying modifications in species' composition, functional redundancy, and functional group turnover. Functional traits were similar for random forest classifications of the same natural cover but differed among landscapes. In the piedmont forests, social behavior—migratory status—was a functional trait combination common to all classifications, while foraging behavior-nest location trait combination was common to all forests scenarios in flooded savannas landscape classifications. Migratory status was a functional trait for all savanna classifications. Functional groups described the impacts of land-use changes on bird assemblages. Identification and characterization of these groups using trait attributes can help predict species' responses to land-use changes and guide conservation efforts toward groups with decreased occurrence probability, including recommendations for agricultural practices that can reduce impacts on the Orinoquia biodiversity.

Highlights

  • The loss and degradation of natural habitats due to land-use changes are among the main drivers of biodiversity loss (Foley et al, 2005; Millenium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005; Baan et al, 2013; Deinet et al, 2018)

  • In Llanos piedmont (LP) forests, social behavior–migratory status was identified as a response trait combination in all classifications

  • For LP forests’ livestock classification, foraging the stratum diet and migratory status–culmen length correspond to additional trait combinations showing a functional response, while foraging behavior–nest location and foraging stratum–tarsus length were added to social behavior–migratory status in the forests’ rice classification (Figure 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The loss and degradation of natural habitats due to land-use changes are among the main drivers of biodiversity loss (Foley et al, 2005; Millenium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005; Baan et al, 2013; Deinet et al, 2018). The Sustainable Development Goals program promotes sustainable agriculture and reduces its effects on the degradation of natural habitats. Such sustainability could be supported by developing indicators that aid in understanding and predicting the impacts of anthropic pressures and the design and monitoring of conservation strategies (Burtchart et al, 2010; Biodiversity Indicators Partnership, 2011)

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