Periodic migration and lowland forest refugia in a ''sedentary'' neotropical bird, Wetmore's Bush-Tanager

被引:40
作者
Winker, K
Escalante, P
Rappole, JH
Ramos, MA
Oehlenschlager, RJ
Warner, DW
机构
[1] CONSERVAT & RES CTR, FRONT ROYAL, VA 22630 USA
[2] UNIV NACL AUTONOMA MEXICO, DEPT ZOOL, INST BIOL, MEXICO CITY 04510, DF, MEXICO
[3] WORLD BANK, ENVIRONM ASSESSMENT PROGRAM DIV, WASHINGTON, DC 20433 USA
[4] SCI MUSEUM MINNESOTA, ST PAUL, MN 55101 USA
[5] UNIV MINNESOTA, BELL MUSEUM NAT HIST, ST PAUL, MN 55108 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1523-1739.1997.95450.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Although the concept of tropical birds as sedentary is pervasive, evidence suggests many are not. Our grasp of movement status in tropical birds is decidedly poor, but the successful long-term conservation of these birds depends on such information. Sedentariness will likely doom much tropical avian diversity, but increased vagility is a two-edged sword: beneficial in promoting immigration, but detrimental in that more than one habitat may be required. Birds requiring more than one habitat may be unable to locate a particular type as landscape modifications increase. Our long-term data set from the Sierra de Los Tuxtlas in southern Veracruz, Mexico, reveals infrequent, large-scale movements in a local highland endemic. Wetmore's Bush-Tanager (Chlorospingus ophthalmicus wetmorei) seems occasionally dependent upon lowland forests (now greatly diminished) as a refugium from temporarily unsuitable highlands. Our data and observations lead us to three conclusions: 1) assumptions of sedentariness in tropical birds should be made with extreme caution; 2) normal, but periodic phenomena may be easily overlooked, even in relatively long-term studies; and 3) missing such phenomena jeopardizes the success of any conservation plan because over the long term a population may be dependent upon refugia only occasionally occupied.
引用
收藏
页码:692 / 697
页数:6
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