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Título
Diversity and dominance in bird assemblages across habitats in the Ñeembucú wetlands complex
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Anthropogenic impact
Avian assemblages
Beta diversity
Habitat heterogeneity
Neotropical Wetlands
Oligarchic species
Paraguay
Clasificación UNESCO
3105.12 Ordenación y Conservación de la Fauna Silvestre
2401.06 Ecología Animal
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Wiley
Citación
Ortiz, F., Salinas, P., Mendoza, M., Zárate, G., Da Motta, F. P., Esquivel, A., Núñez, K., & Silla, F. (2024). Diversity and dominance in bird assemblages across habitats in the Ñeembucú wetlands complex. Biotropica, 56(5), e13368. https://doi.org/10.1111/btp.13368
Resumen
[EN] Understanding how diversity responds to habitat heterogeneity in a landscape is a
central issue for implementing effective conservation plans. In this study, we analyzed
how the composition and abundance of neotropical bird assemblages vary among
habitats in the Ñeembucú Wetlands Complex, the largest wetland system in Paraguay.
Bird surveys were conducted during 1 year within dominant habitats in the landscape:
riparian forests, natural grasslands, savannas, and anthropized sites. The Ñeembucú
Wetlands Complex showed a high bird richness (209 species) that contrasted with a
pattern of dominance by a small set of 16 species that comprised half of the abundance.
This set of oligarchic species consists of generalist species that exploited a
wide variety of habitats and were well adapted to human disturbance, contributing
to an important overlap in the composition of assemblages. However, despite this
overall similarity, there is still significant differentiation in bird assemblages, especially
between habitats with the most contrasting vegetation physiognomy. Riparian forests
and savannas showed higher diversity values than the more structurally homogeneous
grasslands. Also, all natural habitats showed, in general, higher diversity values than
anthropized sites. Oligarchic species had higher importance in anthropized environments,
which also had the most uneven distribution of abundance between species,
indicating the dominance by a smaller number of species and the loss of ecological
diversity as farmland and urban development increase.
Descripción
Financiación de acceso abierto proporcionada por los Fondos Europeos FEDER y la Junta de Castilla y León en el marco de la Estrategia de Investigación e Innovación para la Especialización Inteligente (RIS3) de Castilla y León 2021-2027
URI
ISSN
0006-3606
DOI
10.1111/btp.13368
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