Invertebrate food supply and reproductive success of two native forest passerines along an elevational gradient

IF 1.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY New Zealand Journal of Ecology Pub Date : 2023-02-10 DOI:10.20417/nzjecol.47.3514
Ann‐Kathrin V. Schlesselmann, J. Innes, Neil Fitzgerald, A. Monks, S. Walker
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Abstract

: Predation by mammals has been identified as the primary limiting factor of Aotearoa New Zealand native birds. Consequently, the ranges of many native forest bird species have contracted to cooler and higher elevation tracts of forest that support fewer introduced mammals. However, lower elevation forests are likely to be intrinsically more productive and able to sustain larger bird populations if control of mammalian pests removes predation as a primary limiting factor. We wanted to determine whether higher elevation forests provide less food for rat-sensitive, sedentary native insectivorous bird species, resulting in their reduced reproductive potential at higher elevations. In spring and summer 2020/21, we sampled invertebrate prey while simultaneously monitoring nest survival and number of fledglings produced by tītitipounamu / rifleman ( Acanthisitta chloris ) and miromiro / tomtit ( Petroica macrocephala ) across three elevational bands on Mount Pirongia, where mammal predators were suppressed. Tracking and camera indices together indicated that introduced mammals were at low relative abundance at all elevations, allowing us to investigate other habitat effects. Biomass of ground-dwelling invertebrates decreased with increasing elevation during the bird breeding season, but was similar across elevational bands later in the season. In contrast, biomass of flying or folivore invertebrates was independent of elevation and only showed clear seasonal trends. In both tītitipounamu and miromiro, nest survival rates marginally decreased with increasing available invertebrate prey, while the number of fledglings of successful nests marginally increased. There was no strong relationship between elevation and nest survival or number of fledglings. These results indicate no clear trend in the reproductive potential of tītitipounamu and miromiro with elevation but do suggest that food supply needs to be considered as an aspect of habitat quality that is related to reproductive success.
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海拔梯度上两种本地森林雀形目无脊椎动物的食物供应和繁殖成功
:哺乳动物的捕食已被确定为新西兰本土鸟类的主要限制因素。因此,许多本土森林鸟类的范围已经缩小到更凉爽、海拔更高的森林地带,以支持更少的引入哺乳动物。然而,如果对哺乳动物害虫的控制消除了捕食这一主要限制因素,那么低海拔森林的生产力可能会更高,并能够维持更大的鸟类种群。我们想确定海拔较高的森林是否会减少对老鼠敏感、久坐不动的本地食虫鸟类的食物,从而降低它们在海拔较高地区的繁殖潜力。2020/21年春季和夏季,我们对无脊椎动物猎物进行了采样,同时监测了在皮隆吉亚山的三个海拔带上,tītitipunamu/rifleman(Acanthisitta chloris)和miromiro/tomtit(Petroica macrobhala)产生的巢穴存活率和雏鸟数量,哺乳动物捕食者在那里受到了抑制。追踪和相机指数共同表明,引入的哺乳动物在所有海拔高度的相对丰度都很低,这使我们能够调查其他栖息地的影响。在鸟类繁殖季节,地面无脊椎动物的生物量随着海拔的增加而减少,但在该季节晚些时候,海拔带的生物量相似。相比之下,飞行无脊椎动物或食叶无脊椎动物的生物量与海拔高度无关,仅表现出明显的季节性趋势。在蒂蒂普纳穆和米罗米罗,巢穴存活率随着可用无脊椎动物猎物的增加而略有下降,而成功巢穴的雏鸟数量则略有增加。海拔高度和巢穴存活率或幼鸟数量之间没有明显的关系。这些结果表明,随着海拔的升高,蒂蒂普纳穆和米罗米罗的繁殖潜力没有明显的趋势,但确实表明,需要将食物供应视为与繁殖成功相关的栖息地质量的一个方面。
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来源期刊
New Zealand Journal of Ecology
New Zealand Journal of Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
12.50%
发文量
35
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The New Zealand Journal of Ecology is a biannual peer-reviewed journal publishing ecological research relevant to New Zealand/Aotearoa and the South Pacific. It has been published since 1952 (as a 1952 issue of New Zealand Science Review and as the Proceedings of the New Zealand Ecological Society until 1977). The Journal is published by the New Zealand Ecological Society (Inc.), and is covered by Current Contents/Agriculture, Biology and Environmental Science, GEOBASE, and Geo Abstracts.
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