Abstract

We evaluated the taxonomic and functional diversity of birds in a rural landscape in the north-eastern Andes of Colombia. We carried out seven field trips and used transects of 300 m, separated from each other by 500 m in the dominant plant cover of the rural landscape. We measured alpha (α) and beta (β) diversity at both the taxonomic and functional levels. We registered 10 orders, 21 families, 56 genera and 63 species of birds. In wooded pasture, we recorded 55 species and a relative abundance of 66% and 44 and 34% for an Andean forest fragment. The species that contributed the most to the dissimilarity between the covers wereZonotrichia capensis,Turdus fuscater,Mecocerculus leucophrys,Atlapetes latinuchusandCrotophaga ani. We identified nine functional types, where G1 was made up of small species with anissodactyl and pamprodactyl legs that were insectivorous, frugivorous and nectarivorous as the best represented. The FEve and FDiv were 0.51 and 0.74, respectively in the Andean forest fragment plant cover and, for the wooded pasture, the FEve was 0.45 and the FDiv was 0.81. Both cover types contributed to the diversity of the rural landscape and the dynamics that existed between them formed a complementary factor that favoured the taxonomic and functional richness of the characterised rural landscape.

Highlights

  • The transformation of landscapes by the loss and fragmentation of land-cover types results in a mosaic of native plant cover, surrounded by extensive areas of anthropogenic cover types (Collinge 2009; IPBES 2019)

  • We evaluated the taxonomic and functional diversity of birds in a rural landscape in the north-eastern Andes of Colombia

  • We obtained a high proportion of avian species richness from the two cover types

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Summary

Introduction

The transformation of landscapes by the loss and fragmentation of land-cover types results in a mosaic of native plant cover, surrounded by extensive areas of anthropogenic cover types (Collinge 2009; IPBES 2019). The evaluation of specific diversity (alpha) through the analysis of species richness, relative abundance (structure) and species composition added to the quantification of diversity functional traits of species provides new and complementary information for the conservation of species in rural landscapes (Oldeland et al 2010). This fact becomes relevant if we consider the changes that species undergo at the level of behavioural and functional attributes with habitat disturbance, as seen in the Andes of Colombia, where severe transformation patterns linked to human occupation have been documented (Cavelier and Etter 1995; MoranteFilho et al 2016)

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