Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds

Urbanization is a widespread and rapidly growing threat to biodiversity, therefore we need a predictive understanding of its effects on species and ecosystem processes. In this paper we study the impact of urbanization on a guild of nectar-feeding birds in a biodiversity hotspot at the Cape of Afric...

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Main Authors: Anton Pauw, Kirsten Louw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2012-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss2/art27/
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spelling doaj-c32665010da24e4ab4a43468e857f7f32020-11-24T23:18:58ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-06-011722710.5751/ES-04758-1702274758Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding BirdsAnton Pauw0Kirsten Louw1Stellenbosch UniversityPublished posthumouslyUrbanization is a widespread and rapidly growing threat to biodiversity, therefore we need a predictive understanding of its effects on species and ecosystem processes. In this paper we study the impact of urbanization on a guild of nectar-feeding birds in a biodiversity hotspot at the Cape of Africa. The guild of four bird species provides important ecosystem services by pollinating 320 plant species in the Cape Floral Region. Functional diversity within the guild is related to differences in bill length. The long-billed Malachite Sunbird (Nectarinia famosa) plays an irreplaceable role as the exclusive pollinator of plant species with long nectar tubes. We analyzed the composition of the guild in suburban gardens of Cape Town along a gradient of increasing distance from the nearest natural habitat. Urbanization reduces the functional diversity of the nectarivore guild. Malachite Sunbirds did not penetrate more than 1 km into the city, whereas only the short-billed Southern Double-collared Sunbirds (Cinnyris chalybea) occurred throughout the urbanization gradient. The lack of data precludes conclusions regarding the detailed responses of Orange-breasted Sunbirds (Anthobaphes violacea) and Sugarbirds (Promerops cafer), however their absence across the entire gradient is suggestive of high sensitivity. The functional diversity of this guild of pollinators can potentially be restored, but the pros and cons of this conservation action need to be considered.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss2/art27/bird pollinationcitizen scienceecosystem serviceshummingbird feedersmobile link organismmutualism disruptionnectarivoreresilienceurban ecologyurban planning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anton Pauw
Kirsten Louw
spellingShingle Anton Pauw
Kirsten Louw
Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds
Ecology and Society
bird pollination
citizen science
ecosystem services
hummingbird feeders
mobile link organism
mutualism disruption
nectarivore
resilience
urban ecology
urban planning
author_facet Anton Pauw
Kirsten Louw
author_sort Anton Pauw
title Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds
title_short Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds
title_full Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds
title_fullStr Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds
title_full_unstemmed Urbanization Drives a Reduction in Functional Diversity in a Guild of Nectar-feeding Birds
title_sort urbanization drives a reduction in functional diversity in a guild of nectar-feeding birds
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Urbanization is a widespread and rapidly growing threat to biodiversity, therefore we need a predictive understanding of its effects on species and ecosystem processes. In this paper we study the impact of urbanization on a guild of nectar-feeding birds in a biodiversity hotspot at the Cape of Africa. The guild of four bird species provides important ecosystem services by pollinating 320 plant species in the Cape Floral Region. Functional diversity within the guild is related to differences in bill length. The long-billed Malachite Sunbird (Nectarinia famosa) plays an irreplaceable role as the exclusive pollinator of plant species with long nectar tubes. We analyzed the composition of the guild in suburban gardens of Cape Town along a gradient of increasing distance from the nearest natural habitat. Urbanization reduces the functional diversity of the nectarivore guild. Malachite Sunbirds did not penetrate more than 1 km into the city, whereas only the short-billed Southern Double-collared Sunbirds (Cinnyris chalybea) occurred throughout the urbanization gradient. The lack of data precludes conclusions regarding the detailed responses of Orange-breasted Sunbirds (Anthobaphes violacea) and Sugarbirds (Promerops cafer), however their absence across the entire gradient is suggestive of high sensitivity. The functional diversity of this guild of pollinators can potentially be restored, but the pros and cons of this conservation action need to be considered.
topic bird pollination
citizen science
ecosystem services
hummingbird feeders
mobile link organism
mutualism disruption
nectarivore
resilience
urban ecology
urban planning
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss2/art27/
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