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Logging and climate change threaten montane birds

Logging and climate change threaten montane birds
A Yellow-throated fulvetta with metal and colour rings. Credit: Micah Rai

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have studied the effects of forest logging and climate change on bird communities in tropical mountains, by examining over 10 years of data.

In a study published in Global Ecology and Conservation, the team used mist netting and bird ringing data to answer how the composition of the mid-elevation Eastern Himalayan understory bird community changed in primary (undisturbed) forests as well as in logged forests.

Tropical montane forests are unique ecosystems that can start at about 150–200 m and reach up to 3,500 m high up on mountains around the world. They are critical centers of biodiversity.

"In tropical mountains, each species has a particular niche where it is found. This restriction creates much more diversity in a small space," explains Ritobroto Chanda, former Project Associate at the Center for Ecological Sciences (CES), IISc, and corresponding author of the study.

Forest loss and climate change present major threats to these ecosystems. "Birds—and indeed much of the flora and fauna—of tropical mountain ranges are extremely temperature-sensitive and are responding to global heating rapidly. Also, most of the world's terrestrial biodiversity is concentrated in tropical mountains," says Umesh Srinivasan, Assistant Professor at CES and another author. However, very few studies have explored the joint influence of these threats.

Logging and climate change threaten montane birds
Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary. Credit: Global Change Lab, CES

The team found that many have started shifting to due to rising temperatures. Logged forests have higher average temperatures and lower humidity than primary forests, thus hastening the transition. Additionally, birds that are smaller in size seem to colonize these logged forests better because they can tolerate higher temperatures, while the density of larger bird species appears to be increasing in the primary forests.

The team collected data from the Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, Arunachal Pradesh, situated in the biodiversity hotspot of Eastern Himalayas and home to over 500 bird species. The area saw intensive logging until 2002, and the logged regions have major differences compared to intact forests, making them ideal for the study. The support of the local communities is also critical to carry out such studies, Chanda says.

"You have to stay in a with no paved roads, no electricity, and no place to stay as such. We take our food with us, cook on a daily basis, make a makeshift camp and move around, and without the people's support, it's really not possible to continue this for a long time," he emphasizes.

Each day, after setting up the mist nets, the team checked them every 20–30 minutes, weighed and labeled the birds, and released them immediately. Out of the 6,189 captured individuals from 130 species, the final analysis included 4,801 understory insectivores—insect-eating birds that live under the canopy of large trees—belonging to about 61 species.

The researchers focused on these birds because their niches are well defined and abundant data from the mist nets is available for them. Rare species were left out of the study to avoid skewed results.

  • Logging and climate change threaten montane birds
    Field crew. Credit: Global Change Lab, CES
  • Logging and climate change threaten montane birds
    A Chestnut-headed Tesia being ringed. Credit: Global Change Lab, CES

What the team found was that logging can lead to the loss of large-bodied, old growth-dependent species, and decrease the overall biodiversity.

Understory insectivores, which are often found only in specific niches, are negatively influenced by logging and show steep declines in numbers.

Logged forests also have lower densities of foliage-dwelling insects, reducing the resource availability for the birds. Since large species have higher energy requirements, this disproportionately reduces the abundance of large species.

The study highlights the need to safeguard in order to mitigate the effects of climate change. "Logging managers should ensure that undisturbed forests across large elevational gradients are protected," says Srinivasan.

He explains that this will allow species to shift their ranges upwards in response to and maintain survival. "If species encounter degraded while they shift upwards, certain will most likely go locally extinct."

More information: Ritobroto Chanda et al, Bird communities in a selectively logged tropical montane forest are dominated by small, low-elevation species, Global Ecology and Conservation (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2023.e02664

Journal information: Global Ecology and Conservation

Citation: Logging and climate change threaten montane birds (2024, January 5) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2024-01-climate-threaten-montane-birds.html
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