Logo image
No country for small birds: Potential positive association among medium-sized, aggressive species in Australian bird communities
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

No country for small birds: Potential positive association among medium-sized, aggressive species in Australian bird communities

Vicente García-Navas, Gabriel López-Poveda, Louis Bliard, Leslie Christidis and Arpat Ozgul
Diversity & distributions, Vol.29(12), pp.1561-1577
12/2023
pdf
No country for small birds: Potential positive association among medium-sized, aggressive species in Australian bird communities4.54 MBDownloadView
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open Access
url
No country for small birds: Potential positive association among medium-sized, aggressive species in Australian bird communitiesView
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open

Related links

Metrics

5 File views/ downloads
31 Record Views

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

Abstract

Australia bird assemblages competition HMSC joint species distribution models Manorina melanocephala species associations woodlands
Aim Australian woodlands have been intensively cleared since European settlement and, in parallel, many species of birds inhabiting this habitat type have experienced a marked decline. Conversely, some species such as noisy miner Manorina melanocephala respond positively to habitat disturbance and due to their hyper-aggressiveness can end up driving away specialized and fragmentation-sensitive species. Recent studies have suggested that the negative impact of miners is exacerbated by means of synergistic interactions between these and other aggressive species, including nest predators. However, it is not clear if these positive associations arise through similar habitat requirements or due to potential mutual benefits (‘facilitation effects’), which should predominate in harsh environments as the stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH) predicts. Location Eastern Australia. Methods We combined a multi-season community N-mixture model and joint species distribution models within the Hierarchical Modelling of Species Communities framework to examine species co-occurrence patterns after accounting for imperfect detection and the influence of environmental variables. We then explored how the balance between positive and negative associations varied along an abiotic stress gradient and whether species-to-species associations were non-randomly distributed with respect to species traits. Results No significant associations were detected; we only found tentative associations (posterior probability 85%) in a low proportion of species pairs (~4%). Although most non-random (tentative) associations were negative, these were weaker and less consistent across models than the positive ones. Five medium-sized species of swooping birds including the noisy miner monopolized virtually all positive associations. Communities from low-productivity environments tended to show a lower degree of overall (community-level) competitiveness than those located in less stressful (more productive) environments, which supports the SGH. There was no significant relationship between species trait dissimilarity and species-to-species association's strength. Main Conclusions Our results suggest that aggressive species like miners, kookaburras, lorikeets, magpies and butcherbirds can form potential synergies with each other that may intensify the direct negative influence of each species on small-sized songbirds. Since these species thrive in anthropized landscapes and have drastically increased their numbers in some regions, their associative potential should be considered in conservation actions.

Details

Logo image