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Title
Elevation and landscape change drive the distribution of a montane, endemic grassland bird
Author(s)
Lele, A.; Arasumani, M.; Vishnudas, C. K.; Joshi, V.; Jathanna, D.; Robin, V. V.
Published
2020
Publisher
Ecology and Evolution
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6500
DOI for Open Access preprint or postprint version of article


10.1101/695536
Abstract
Context: Tropical montane habitats support high biodiversity and are hotspots of endemism, with grasslands being integral components of many such landscapes. The montane grasslands of the Western Ghats have seen extensive land-use change over anthropogenic timescales. The factors influencing the ability of grassland-dependent species to persist in habitats experiencing loss and fragmentation, particularly in montane grasslands, are poorly known. Objectives: We studied the relationship between the Nilgiri pipitAnthus nilghiriensis, a threatened endemic bird that typifies these montane grasslands, and its habitat, across most of its global distribution. We examined what habitat features make remnant grasslands viable, which is necessary for their effective management. Methods: We conducted 663 surveys in 170 sites and used both single-season occupancy modeling and N-mixture modeling to account for processes influencing detection, presence, and abundance. Results: Elevation had a positive influence on species presence, patch size had a moderate positive influence, and patch isolation had a moderate negative influence. Species abundance was positively influenced by elevation and characteristics related to habitat structure, and negatively influenced by the presence of invasive woody vegetation. Conclusions: The strong effect of elevation on the highly range-restricted Nilgiri pipit is likely to make it vulnerable to climate change. This highly range-restricted species is locally extinct at several locations, and persists at low densities in remnants of its habitat left by recent fragmentation. Our findings indicate a need to control and reverse the spread of exotic woody invasives to preserve the grasslands themselves and the specialist species dependent upon them.
Keywords
acacia, conservation, habitat heterogeneity, occupancy, shola ecosystem, shola sky islands, tropical montane ecosystems, shortwing brachypteryx-major, n-mixture models, Western Ghats, habitat, fragmentation, climate change, range shifts, associations, diversity, environmental sciences and ecology, evolutionary biology

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