Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.

Remote tropical oceanic islands are of high conservation priority, and they are exemplified by range-restricted species with small global populations. Spatial and temporal patterns in rainfall and plant productivity may be important in driving dynamics of these species. Yet, little is known about en...

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Main Authors: James F Saracco, Paul Radley, Peter Pyle, Erin Rowan, Ron Taylor, Lauren Helton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4749318?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-62bd325bc2714911960e3e89b877a3e62020-11-25T02:06:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01112e014857010.1371/journal.pone.0148570Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.James F SaraccoPaul RadleyPeter PyleErin RowanRon TaylorLauren HeltonRemote tropical oceanic islands are of high conservation priority, and they are exemplified by range-restricted species with small global populations. Spatial and temporal patterns in rainfall and plant productivity may be important in driving dynamics of these species. Yet, little is known about environmental influences on population dynamics for most islands and species. Here we leveraged avian capture-recapture, rainfall, and remote-sensed habitat data (enhanced vegetation index [EVI]) to assess relationships between rainfall, vegetation greenness, and demographic rates (productivity, adult apparent survival) of three native bird species on Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands: rufous fantail (Rhipidura rufifrons), bridled white-eye (Zosterops conspicillatus), and golden white-eye (Cleptornis marchei). Rainfall was positively related to vegetation greenness at all but the highest rainfall levels. Temporal variation in greenness affected the productivity of each bird species in unique ways. Predicted productivity of rufous fantail was highest when dry and wet season greenness values were high relative to site-specific 5-year seasonal mean values (i.e., relative greenness); while the white-eye species had highest predicted productivity when relative greenness contrasted between wet and dry seasons. Survival of rufous fantail and bridled white eye was positively related to relative dry-season greenness and negatively related to relative wet-season greenness. Bridled white-eye survival also showed evidence of a positive response to overall greenness. Our results highlight the potentially important role of rainfall regimes in affecting population dynamics of species on oceanic tropical islands. Understanding linkages between rainfall, vegetation, and animal population dynamics will be critical for developing effective conservation strategies in this and other regions where the seasonal timing, extent, and variability of rainfall is expected to change in the coming decades.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4749318?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James F Saracco
Paul Radley
Peter Pyle
Erin Rowan
Ron Taylor
Lauren Helton
spellingShingle James F Saracco
Paul Radley
Peter Pyle
Erin Rowan
Ron Taylor
Lauren Helton
Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James F Saracco
Paul Radley
Peter Pyle
Erin Rowan
Ron Taylor
Lauren Helton
author_sort James F Saracco
title Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.
title_short Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.
title_full Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.
title_fullStr Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.
title_full_unstemmed Linking Vital Rates of Landbirds on a Tropical Island to Rainfall and Vegetation Greenness.
title_sort linking vital rates of landbirds on a tropical island to rainfall and vegetation greenness.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Remote tropical oceanic islands are of high conservation priority, and they are exemplified by range-restricted species with small global populations. Spatial and temporal patterns in rainfall and plant productivity may be important in driving dynamics of these species. Yet, little is known about environmental influences on population dynamics for most islands and species. Here we leveraged avian capture-recapture, rainfall, and remote-sensed habitat data (enhanced vegetation index [EVI]) to assess relationships between rainfall, vegetation greenness, and demographic rates (productivity, adult apparent survival) of three native bird species on Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands: rufous fantail (Rhipidura rufifrons), bridled white-eye (Zosterops conspicillatus), and golden white-eye (Cleptornis marchei). Rainfall was positively related to vegetation greenness at all but the highest rainfall levels. Temporal variation in greenness affected the productivity of each bird species in unique ways. Predicted productivity of rufous fantail was highest when dry and wet season greenness values were high relative to site-specific 5-year seasonal mean values (i.e., relative greenness); while the white-eye species had highest predicted productivity when relative greenness contrasted between wet and dry seasons. Survival of rufous fantail and bridled white eye was positively related to relative dry-season greenness and negatively related to relative wet-season greenness. Bridled white-eye survival also showed evidence of a positive response to overall greenness. Our results highlight the potentially important role of rainfall regimes in affecting population dynamics of species on oceanic tropical islands. Understanding linkages between rainfall, vegetation, and animal population dynamics will be critical for developing effective conservation strategies in this and other regions where the seasonal timing, extent, and variability of rainfall is expected to change in the coming decades.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4749318?pdf=render
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