Understanding the distribution of a threatened bird at multiple levels: A hierarchical analysis of the ecological niche of the Santa Marta Bush-Tyrant (Myiotheretes pernix)
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2015Metadata
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Botero Delgadillo, Esteban
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Understanding the distribution of a threatened bird at multiple levels: A hierarchical analysis of the ecological niche of the Santa Marta Bush-Tyrant (Myiotheretes pernix)
Abstract
An understanding of the ecological factors determining bird species’ distributions is essential for making informed
conservation decisions. These data are especially important for range-restricted species, such as the Santa Marta Bush-
Tyrant (Myiotheretes pernix), a threatened endemic of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta (SNSM) in Colombia. Here we
adopt a novel hierarchical analysis to describe the bush-tyrant’s ecological niche and infer the regional and local
determinants of its limited distribution. We first describe habitat selection based on local habitat use and microhabitats
used for foraging. We then use a geoprocessing modeling algorithm to combine habitat selection data with a climatic
niche model. The resulting model produced an index of habitat suitability, which we converted into a predicted
geographic distribution. Santa Marta Bush-Tyrants showed no clear habitat preferences, but favored forested and
secondary growth habitats over open areas, at elevations between 2,100 and 3,300 m. The species’ predicted
distribution was restricted to the northern flanks of the SNSM, with an estimated extent of ~352 km2. This estimate is
more restricted than previous estimates (570 km2), but does not alter the species’ status as Endangered based on IUCN
criteria. The model predicted that the presence of Santa Marta Bush-Tyrants was regionally dependent on cold and
humid climates, with low annual variation in temperature and precipitation. Locally, the species’ presence was
determined by the availability of habitat edges between forests and open areas. Conservation actions should aim to
reduce rates of forest loss, while maintaining the presence of areas with good light and exposed perches, microhabitat
conditions typically found in habitat edges or areas of natural disturbance. An explicit integration of quantitative data
on habitat use and foraging patterns into niche models would help to obtain more realistic and detailed projections of
the occupied distribution of range-restricted birds.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/136531
DOI: DOI: 10.1650/CONDOR-15-26.1
ISSN: 0010-5422
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Condor Volume 117, 2015, pp. 629–643
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