Data from: The response of mixed-species bird flocks to anthropogenic disturbance and elevational variation in southwest China

Avian mixed-species flocks (MSFs) are an important example of species interactions threatened by the biodiversity crisis. They are found throughout the world in forested habitats, but are generally reduced in size or frequency by human disturbance. In southern China, a unique MSF system has been des...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhou, Liping, Peabotuwage, Indika, Gu, Hao, Jiang, Demeng, Hu, Guohua, Jiang, Aiwu, Mammides, Christos, Zhang, Mingxia, Quan, Rui-Chang, Goodale, Eben
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.216264
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.t2t00m0
Description
Summary:Avian mixed-species flocks (MSFs) are an important example of species interactions threatened by the biodiversity crisis. They are found throughout the world in forested habitats, but are generally reduced in size or frequency by human disturbance. In southern China, a unique MSF system has been described that is led by fulvettas (Alcippe morrisonia, A. hueti and A. davidi). Our objective was to understand how this system is distributed across elevational gradients, especially moving west into the Hengduan Mountains, and how it responds to human disturbance. We sampled leadership and composition of 375 MSFs over 2 years in and surrounding 5 nature reserves in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Yunnan Province, with transects placed in different land use types – protected forest, buffer areas, or agriculture – and ranging from 400 to 3200 m. We also sampled birds outside of MSFs. We found MSFs led by fulvettas (A. fratercula and A. davidi) in forests across the region up to 2900 m. Elevation was not a significant influence on MSF size or prevalence in models that also included land use. We found that MSFs were encountered at only 1/3 of the frequency in agriculture as in forest, and had strongly different composition and leadership. Although MSFs in buffer areas more similar to those in forest, birds in buffer had lower flocking propensity with different flock leaders and less complex social networks. In particular, buffer transects that were seeded pine had low numbers of fulvetta-led MSFs and forest specialists. In the future, it is important to understand which vegetational characteristics allow MSFs, particularly fulvetta-led MSFs, to persist in buffer habitats.