Correlates of elevational specialisation in Southeast Asian tropical birds
Correlates of elevational specialisation in Southeast Asian tropical birds
The understanding of elevational selectivity in extremely rich tropical biotas is critical to the study of accelerating human-mediated environmental changes (e.g., deforestation and global climate warming). This paper explores the characteristics of Southeast Asian birds that are altitudinal specialists (i.e., lowland specialists and montane specialists) by assessing the relative importance of various species traits (e.g., breeding phenology and clutch size) in determining the altitudinal specialisation of these tropical birds. After controlling for phylogeny, we found that habitat specificity, breeding phenology, and clutch size were significant correlates of lowland specialisation. The most parsimonious model predicting lowland specialisation included the first of these only. Breeding phenology was the significant phylogeny-independent correlate of montane specialisation. Thus, species were confined to altitudinal niches by different constraints. By analysing the altitudinal distribution of Southeast Asian birds, we provide insights on why altitudinal confinement exists in lowland and montane specialists. Understanding such constraints may be important for the conservation of tropical birds.
altitudinal specialisation, breeding phenology, climate change, generalists, habitat specificity, lowland, montane
249-257
Peh, Kelvin S.-H.
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Soh, Malcolm C.K.
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Yap, Charlotte A.-M.
a7c912a9-b2e0-4eb4-b0fd-766649395e5e
Sekercioglu, Cagan H.
8c3082cb-0a1a-46e0-80d1-4090c6ea7254
30 June 2012
Peh, Kelvin S.-H.
0bd60207-dad8-43fb-a84a-a15e09b024cc
Soh, Malcolm C.K.
a059045a-c476-4b31-ad8c-64e4e1d3a1b3
Yap, Charlotte A.-M.
a7c912a9-b2e0-4eb4-b0fd-766649395e5e
Sekercioglu, Cagan H.
8c3082cb-0a1a-46e0-80d1-4090c6ea7254
Peh, Kelvin S.-H., Soh, Malcolm C.K., Yap, Charlotte A.-M. and Sekercioglu, Cagan H.
(2012)
Correlates of elevational specialisation in Southeast Asian tropical birds.
Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, supplement 25, .
Abstract
The understanding of elevational selectivity in extremely rich tropical biotas is critical to the study of accelerating human-mediated environmental changes (e.g., deforestation and global climate warming). This paper explores the characteristics of Southeast Asian birds that are altitudinal specialists (i.e., lowland specialists and montane specialists) by assessing the relative importance of various species traits (e.g., breeding phenology and clutch size) in determining the altitudinal specialisation of these tropical birds. After controlling for phylogeny, we found that habitat specificity, breeding phenology, and clutch size were significant correlates of lowland specialisation. The most parsimonious model predicting lowland specialisation included the first of these only. Breeding phenology was the significant phylogeny-independent correlate of montane specialisation. Thus, species were confined to altitudinal niches by different constraints. By analysing the altitudinal distribution of Southeast Asian birds, we provide insights on why altitudinal confinement exists in lowland and montane specialists. Understanding such constraints may be important for the conservation of tropical birds.
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Elevational specialisation in Southeast Asian birds.pdf
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Published date: 30 June 2012
Keywords:
altitudinal specialisation, breeding phenology, climate change, generalists, habitat specificity, lowland, montane
Organisations:
Centre for Biological Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 352968
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/352968
ISSN: 0217-2445
PURE UUID: 9213ccbf-3d38-4c15-bb48-1fff23960d33
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Date deposited: 22 May 2013 11:11
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:44
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Contributors
Author:
Malcolm C.K. Soh
Author:
Charlotte A.-M. Yap
Author:
Cagan H. Sekercioglu
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