Natural history and community science records confirm rapid geographic shifts in the distribution of Bachman’s Sparrow (Peucaea aestivalis) since 1850

IF 1.4 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Avian Conservation and Ecology Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.5751/ace-02046-170124
Amie E. Settlecowski, K. Davis, J. A. Cox, Stefan Woltmann, S. Taylor
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Abstract

. North American grassland birds colonized emerging habitat created by expanding agriculture in a pattern of eastward expansions from the mid-1800s to mid-1900s. These birds have been declining, since at least the mid-1900s, largely as result of anthropogenic landscape change. Only one bird that now breeds predominantly in southeastern pine savannas is thought to have experienced a concurrent range expansion into this region: Peucaea aestivalis (Bachman’s Sparrow). However, our understanding of the P. aestivalis expansion, and subsequent retraction to the southeastern United States, is largely based on a contemporaneous review of only a subset of historical records from beyond its modern, northern limit. We suggest an alternative explanation for these historical records is that P. aestivalis historically occurred more broadly than was recognized in contemporaneous literature. To evaluate these hypotheses, we reviewed field observations from literature, natural history collections, and eBird to show how P. aestivalis presence throughout eastern North America has shifted since the mid-1800s. To confirm that these findings were not the result of detection bias, we repeated our analysis on a common sparrow species ( Spizella pusilla ) with a largely overlapping breeding range, but no history of expansion and retraction. We confirm that P. aestivalis expanded its range, but add that prior to that expansion, its historical distribution was broader than commonly acknowledged today. As a result, we identify the northwestern historical limit of P. aestivalis , the Ouachita and Ozark highlands, as a potential source region for an eastward expansion that is consistent with those of other North American grassland birds of the era. We discuss the potential evolutionary and conservation implications of this range expansion on P. aestivalis given our more nuanced understanding of it. Anthropogenic landscape change initially provided additional habitat for P. aestivalis but has ultimately resulted in a reduction of the P. aestivalis distribution
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自然历史和社区科学记录证实,自1850年以来巴克曼麻雀(Peucaea aestivalis)的分布发生了快速的地理变化
. 从19世纪中期到20世纪中期,北美草原上的鸟类以一种向东扩张的模式扩张了农业,从而占领了新兴的栖息地。至少从20世纪中期开始,这些鸟类就一直在减少,这主要是人为景观变化的结果。只有一种鸟类现在主要在东南部的松林稀树草原上繁殖,被认为经历了同时扩展到该地区的活动范围:巴赫曼麻雀(Peucaea aestivalis)。然而,我们对P. aestivalis的扩张和随后向美国东南部的撤退的理解,很大程度上是基于对其现代北部界限之外的一小部分历史记录的同期回顾。我们建议对这些历史记录的另一种解释是,在历史上,aestivalis的发生范围比同期文献中认识到的要广泛。为了评估这些假设,我们回顾了来自文献、自然历史收藏和eBird的实地观察,以显示自19世纪中期以来,在北美东部地区,aestivalis的存在是如何变化的。为了证实这些发现不是检测偏差的结果,我们对一种繁殖范围重叠但没有扩张和收缩史的常见麻雀(Spizella pusilla)进行了重复分析。我们确认,P. aestivalis扩大了它的范围,但补充说,在扩张之前,它的历史分布比今天普遍承认的更广泛。因此,我们确定了西北的历史界限,瓦希塔和奥扎克高地,作为一个潜在的向东扩张的源区,与其他北美草原鸟类的时代一致。我们讨论了这种范围扩展对P. aestivalis的潜在进化和保护意义,因为我们对它有了更细致的了解。人为的景观变化最初为夏菖蒲提供了额外的栖息地,但最终导致夏菖蒲分布的减少
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来源期刊
Avian Conservation and Ecology
Avian Conservation and Ecology BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-ORNITHOLOGY
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
43
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Avian Conservation and Ecology is an open-access, fully electronic scientific journal, sponsored by the Society of Canadian Ornithologists and Birds Canada. We publish papers that are scientifically rigorous and relevant to the bird conservation community in a cost-effective electronic approach that makes them freely available to scientists and the public in real-time. ACE is a fully indexed ISSN journal that welcomes contributions from scientists all over the world. While the name of the journal implies a publication niche of conservation AND ecology, we think the theme of conservation THROUGH ecology provides a better sense of our purpose. As such, we are particularly interested in contributions that use a scientifically sound and rigorous approach to the achievement of avian conservation as revealed through insights into ecological principles and processes. Papers are expected to fall along a continuum of pure conservation and management at one end to more pure ecology at the other but our emphasis will be on those contributions with direct relevance to conservation objectives.
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