Publication | Open Access
Directional effects of biotic homogenization of bird communities in Mexican seasonal forests
42
Citations
56
References
2017
Year
BiologyLandscape ProcessesBiodiversityBiodiversity LossRange ShiftBiogeographyNatural SciencesHabitat LossEvolutionary BiologyForest ConservationMexican Seasonal ForestsSocial SciencesBiotic Homogenization—the ErosionPopulation EcologyResident Bird CommunitiesDirectional EffectsSpatial EcologyBiotic Homogenization
Biotic homogenization—the erosion of biological differences between ecosystems owing to human perturbation—is a trait of the global biodiversity crisis that can affect tropical dry forest biodiversity. We tested whether biotic homogenization was occurring in resident forest bird communities in west-central Mexico. We conducted point-count surveys to assess biotic dissimilarity between resident bird communities in tropical deciduous and oak forests in the upper Balsas River basin across 3 levels of anthropogenic perturbation: primary forest, second-growth forest, and human settlements. We detected a reduction in species richness and taxonomic dissimilarity with increasing anthropogenic effects, due to a directional pattern in which lowland species expanded their elevational distributions up into oak forests. These results point to a need to change agricultural strategies to mitigate impacts on natural vegetation cover and biodiversity.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1