A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Decomposing drivers in avian insectivory: Large-scale effects of climate, habitat and bird diversity
Authors: Schillé L., Valdés-Correcher E., Archaux F., Bălăcenoiu F., Bjørn M.C., Bogdziewicz M., Boivin T., Branco M., Damestoy T., de Groot M., Dobrosavljević J., Duduman M.L., Dulaurent A.M., Green S., Grünwald J., Eötvös C.B., Faticov M., Fernandez-Conradi P., Flury E., Funosas D., Galmán A., Gossner M.M., Gripenberg S., Grosu L., Hagge J., Hampe A., Harvey D., Houston R., Isenmann R., Kavčič A., Kozlov M.V., Lanta V., Le Tilly B., Lopez-Vaamonde C., Mallick S., Mäntylä E., Mårell A., Milanović S., Molnár M., Moreira X., Moser V., Mrazova A., Musolin D.L., Perot T., Piotti A., Popova A.V., Prinzing A., Pukinskaya L., Sallé A., Sam K., Sedikhin N.V., Shabarova T., Tack A.J.M., Thomas R., Thrikkadeeri K., Toma D., Vaicaityte G., van Halder I., Varela Z., Barbaro L., Castagneyrol B.
Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Inc
Publication year: 2024
Journal: Journal of Biogeography
Journal name in source: Journal of Biogeography
Volume: 51
Issue: 6
First page : 1079
Last page: 1094
ISSN: 0305-0270
eISSN: 1365-2699
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14808
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14808
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/387440212
Preprint address: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.01.19.524212v3
Aim
Climate is a major driver of large-scale variability in biodiversity, as a likely result of more intense biotic interactions under warmer conditions. This idea fuelled decades of research on plant-herbivore interactions, but much less is known about higher-level trophic interactions. We addressed this research gap by characterizing both bird diversity and avian predation along a climatic gradient at the European scale.
Location
Europe.
Taxon
Insectivorous birds and pedunculate oaks.
Methods
We deployed plasticine caterpillars in 138 oak trees in 47 sites along a 19° latitudinal gradient in Europe to quantify bird insectivory through predation attempts. In addition, we used passive acoustic monitoring to (i) characterize the acoustic diversity of surrounding soundscapes; (ii) approximate bird abundance and activity through passive acoustic recordings; and (iii) infer both taxonomic and functional diversity of insectivorous birds from recordings.
Results
The functional diversity of insectivorous birds increased with warmer climates. Bird predation increased with forest cover and bird acoustic activity but decreased with mean annual temperature and functional richness of insectivorous birds. Contrary to our predictions, climatic clines in bird predation attempts were not directly mediated by changes in insectivorous bird diversity or acoustic activity, but climate and habitat still had independent effects on predation attempts.
Main Conclusions
Our study supports the hypothesis of an increase in the diversity of insectivorous birds towards warmer climates but refutes the idea that an increase in diversity would lead to more predation and advocates for better accounting for activity and abundance of insectivorous birds when studying the large-scale variation in insect-tree interactions.
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