Interacting impacts of drought and fire on bird populations—insights from a long-term study in the Warrumbungles

Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Australian Zoologist Pub Date : 2022-08-18 DOI:10.7882/az.2022.036
H. Stevens, D. Watson
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Abstract

The interacting effects of drought and fire on ecological communities are poorly understood. Long-term studies in the Warrumbungle Mountains, central-west New South Wales, subject to drought and fire during the past 21 years, enabled their separate and combined effects to be quantified for individual species and functional groups. Insectivores (especially ground-foragers) dominated previous lists of declining species in this region of NSW and were also prominent in the present work. Insectivores were more likely to be drought- than fire-affected, with seven species declining due to drought, three to drought plus fire, and three to fire alone. Our analyses also revealed declines in a suite of honeyeaters (Meliphagidae), previously not reported as declining. Honeyeaters are major pollinators of eucalypts, so the loss of nectarivores and insectivores has far-reaching implications for pollination, recruitment, successional dynamics, and forest health. Four honeyeater species were adversely affected by drought, five by fire, and one by a combination of drought and fire. Drought and fire, alone or in combination, were implicated in declines of granivores, including the Crimson Rosella Platycercus elegans, and frugivores, especially the Mistletoebird Dicaeum hirundinaceum, the latter reflecting the loss of mistletoes in fire-affected landscapes, and foreshadowing additional losses due to the reliance on mistletoe by many species. Another group not previously identified as threatened, but declining due to drought were two omnivores, the Pied Currawong Strepera graculina and Australian Raven Corvus coronoides. Hollow-nesting birds including two species of treecreeper and the Laughing Kookaburra Dacelo novaeguineae fared badly. Several common Australian species were among the decliners, including Laughing Kookaburra, Willie Wagtail Rhipidura leucophrys and Australian Magpie Cracticus tibicen. We conclude that no suite of birds is exempt from these environmental stressors, and predict that, as droughts reduce populations at regional scales and fires diminish carrying capacity of critical habitats at landscape scales, rarer species will decline to local extinction while more commonly observed species will be reduced in abundance.
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干旱和火灾对鸟类种群的相互影响——来自一项长期研究的见解
人们对干旱和火灾对生态社区的相互影响知之甚少。在过去21年中,新南威尔士州中西部的沃伦本格尔山脉经历了干旱和火灾,对其进行了长期研究,使其能够对单个物种和功能组的单独和综合影响进行量化。食虫动物(尤其是地面觅食动物)在新南威尔士州这一地区以前的衰退物种列表中占主导地位,在目前的工作中也很突出。食虫动物更可能受到干旱的影响,而不是火灾的影响,有七种因干旱而减少,三种因干旱加火灾而减少,还有三种仅因火灾而减少。我们的分析还揭示了一组食蜜动物(蜜蜂科)的数量下降,此前没有报道称其数量下降。食蜜动物是桉树的主要传粉昆虫,因此食蜜动物和食虫动物的消失对授粉、繁殖、演替动态和森林健康具有深远影响。四种食蜜物种受到干旱的不利影响,五种受到火灾的影响,一种受到干旱和火灾的共同影响。干旱和火灾,无论是单独还是结合,都与食草动物的减少有关,包括深红玫瑰秀丽隐杆线虫和食草动物,尤其是槲寄生鸟Dicaeum hirundinaceum,后者反映了受火灾影响的景观中槲寄生的损失,并预示着由于许多物种依赖槲寄生而造成的额外损失。另一个先前未被确定为受威胁但因干旱而减少的群体是两种杂食动物,Pied Currawong Strepera graculina和澳大利亚乌鸦Corvus coronoides。包括两种爬树鸟和笑笑翠鸟在内的空心巢鸟表现不佳。几种常见的澳大利亚物种也在减少中,包括笑笑翠鸟、威利·瓦格泰尔Rhipipdura leucphrys和澳大利亚喜鹊Cracticus tibicin。我们得出的结论是,没有一组鸟类能够免受这些环境压力的影响,并预测,随着干旱在区域范围内减少种群数量,火灾在景观范围内减少关键栖息地的承载能力,稀有物种将减少到局部灭绝,而更常见的物种数量将减少。
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来源期刊
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: The Royal Zoological Society publishes a fully refereed scientific journal, Australian Zoologist, specialising in topics relevant to Australian zoology. The Australian Zoologist was first published by the Society in 1914, making it the oldest Australian journal specialising in zoological topics. The scope of the journal has increased substantially in the last 20 years, and it now attracts papers on a wide variety of zoological, ecological and environmentally related topics. The RZS also publishes, as books, and the outcome of forums, which are run annually by the Society.
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