Ferenc Michal, Fjeldså Jon, Sedláček Ondřej, Motombi Francis Njie, Djomo Nana Eric, Mudrová Karolína, Hořák David
Department of Ecology, Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague, Viničná 7, 12844, Praha 2, Czech Republic.
Center for Macroecology, Evolution, and Climate, Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, 2100, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Oecologia. 2016 May;181(1):225-33. doi: 10.1007/s00442-016-3554-0. Epub 2016 Jan 22.
The usual positive inter-specific relationship between range size and abundance of local populations can have notable exceptions in Afrotropical montane areas, where range-restricted bird species are unusually abundant. We tested how the area occupied locally by passerines and their geographic range size relate to local abundances along a tropical elevational gradient of Mt Cameroon, West-Central Africa. Data on bird assemblages were collected at six forested elevations (350, 650, 1100, 1500, 1850 m, 2200 m a.s.l.) using a standardised point count at 16 locations per elevation. Elevational ranges of birds were compiled from published sources and their geographic range sizes were determined as the occupancy of 1° x 1° grid cells. The observed relationship between local abundance and geographic range size within the entire passerine assemblage on Mt Cameroon disagrees with the most frequently reported positive pattern. However, the patterns differ among elevations, with positive trends of the abundance-range size relationship in lowland changing to negative trends towards higher elevations. Interestingly, the total assemblage abundances do not differ much among elevations and population size estimates of species occupying different parts of the gradient remain relatively constant. These patterns are caused by relatively high abundances of montane species, which might be a result of long-term ecological specialization and/or competitive release in species-poor montane locations and possibly facilitated by an extinction filter. Our data suggest that montane species' abilities to maintain dense populations might compensate for less area available near mountain tops and help these populations to circumvent extinction.
在非洲热带山地地区,分布范围大小与当地种群丰度之间通常存在的种间正相关关系可能会有显著例外,在这些地区,分布范围受限的鸟类物种异常丰富。我们测试了在喀麦隆山(位于非洲中西部)的热带海拔梯度上,雀形目鸟类在当地占据的面积及其地理分布范围大小与当地丰度之间的关系。在六个森林覆盖的海拔高度(海拔350米、650米、1100米、1500米、1850米、2200米)收集鸟类群落数据,每个海拔高度在16个地点使用标准化的点计数法。鸟类的海拔分布范围根据已发表的资料汇编而成,其地理分布范围大小被确定为1°×1°网格单元的占有率。喀麦隆山整个雀形目鸟类群落中观察到的当地丰度与地理分布范围大小之间的关系与最常报道的正相关模式不一致。然而,不同海拔的模式有所不同,低地地区丰度与分布范围大小关系的正趋势在高海拔地区转变为负趋势。有趣的是,不同海拔的总群落丰度差异不大,占据梯度不同部分的物种的种群大小估计值保持相对稳定。这些模式是由山地物种相对较高的丰度造成的,这可能是长期生态特化和/或物种贫乏的山地地区竞争释放的结果,也可能是由灭绝过滤作用促成的。我们的数据表明,山地物种维持密集种群的能力可能弥补山顶附近可用面积较少的问题,并帮助这些种群避免灭绝。