期刊论文详细信息
Endangered Species Research
A test of niche centrality as a determinant of population trends and conservation status in threatened and endangered North American birds
Andrés Lira-Noriega1  Joseph D. Manthey1  Corinne E. Myers1  Erin E. Saupe1  Hannah L. Owens1  Lindsay P. Campbell1  Vijay Barve1  Christopher M. Hensz1  Jorge Soberón1  Narayani Barve1  Kate Ingenloff1  A. Townsend Peterson1 
关键词: Ecological niche;    Geographic range;    Environmental suitability;    Threatened species;    Endangered species;    Population trends;   
DOI  :  10.3354/esr00646
学科分类:动物科学
来源: Inter-Research
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【 摘 要 】

ABSTRACT: Abundance and other aspects of population ecology have long been known to contribute to shaping the geography of species’ distributions. In particular, abundance patterns have recently been shown to negatively correlate with environmental distance from conditions in the center of a species’ abiotic niche, rather than vary with distance from the geographic center of a species’ distribution. We tested for such associations across 8 species of endangered or threatened bird species in North America using population trend data derived from >4 decades of North American Breeding Bird Surveys. Although we found no consistent overall pattern, we did observe negative population trends at conditions that were the most extreme within species’ niches. This suggests that niche peripherality is a relevant factor to consider in conservation planning. Specifically, environmentally peripheral sites may be poor places in which to protect populations of endangered and threatened species, irrespective of how centrally they may occur within species’ geographic distributions.

【 授权许可】

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