Landscape constraints on functional diversity of birds and insects in tropical agroecosystems

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Sekercioglu, Cagan
Other Author Tscharntke, Teja; Dietsch, Thomas V.; Sodhi, Navjot. S.; Hoehn, Patrick; Tylianakis, Jason M.
Title Landscape constraints on functional diversity of birds and insects in tropical agroecosystems
Date 2008-01-01
Description In this paper, we analyze databases on bird and insects to assess patterns of functional diversity in human-dominated landscapes in the tropics. Perspective from developed landscapes is essential for understanding remnant natural ecosystems, because most species experience their surroundings at spatial scales beyond the plot level, and spillover between natural and managed ecosystems is common. Agricultural bird species have greater habitat and diet breadth than forest species. Based on a global data base, bird assemblages in tropical agroforest ecosystems were comprised of disproportionately more frugivorous and nectarivorous, but fewer insectivorous bird species compared with forest. Similarly, insect predators of plant-feeding arthropods were more diverse in Ecuadorian agroforest and forest compared with rice and pasture, while, in Indonesia, bee diversity was also higher in forested habitats. Hence, diversity of insectivorous birds and insect predators as well as bee pollinators declined with agricultural transformation. In contrast, with increasing agricultural intensification, avian pollinators and seed dispersers initially increase then decrease in proportion. It is well established that the proximity of agricultural habitats to forests has a strong influence on the functional diversity of agroecosystems. Community similarity is higher among agricultural systems than natural habitats and higher in simple than complex landscapes for both birds and insects, so natural communities, low-intensity agriculture and heterogeneous landscapes appear to be critical in the preservation of beta diversity. We require a better understanding of the relative role of landscape composition and the spatial configuration of landscape elements in affecting spillover of functionally important species across managed and natural habitats. This is important for data-based management of tropical human-dominated landscapes sustaining the capacity of communities to reorganize after disturbance and to ensure ecological functioning.
Type Text
Publisher Ecological Society of America
Volume 89
First Page 994
Last Page 951
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Tscharntke, T., Sekercioglu, C., Dietsch, T. V., Sodhi, N. S., Hoehn, P., & Tylianakis, J. (2008). Landscape constraints on functional diversity of birds and insects in tropical agroecosystems. Ecology, 89, 994-51.
Rights Management (c) Ecological Society of America
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 197,440 bytes
Identifier uspace,17259
ARK ark:/87278/s6th95ff
Setname ir_uspace
ID 707931
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6th95ff
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