Investigating Plant–Bird Co-Occurrence Patterns in Mediterranean Wetlands: Can They Reveal Signals of Ecosystem Connectivity?

Fois M.
First
;
Cuena-Lombrana A.
Second
;
Zucca C.;Nissardi S.;Bacchetta G.
Last
2022-01-01

Abstract

Interspecific biotic interaction is believed to be a fundamental phenomenon in ecology. However, despite the increasing efforts, interaction mechanisms are still not clearly understood. We compiled a database of 323 birds and 844 vascular plants in 30 wetlands from Sardinia. This was complemented with seed dispersal features and plant structures (suitability for nesting), and with site-level traits, such as wetland surface area, distance from the sea, percentage of open water, protection level, and number of human impacts. The percentage of non-random co-occurrences was then measured, and the relative importance of each trait in determining it was modelled. We found that non-random co-occurrences among sites decreased with the site extent and increase with the percentage of open water, bird zoochory was positively correlated with co-occurrences, nesting birds showed higher rates of co-occurrence than non-nesting birds, and plants with habits suitable for nesting displayed more co-occurrences than the rest of the plants. These results are a small contribution to the complex topic of species co-occurrence and connectivity within an ecosystem. Species co-occurrence is a promising but debatable approach that may provide insightful clues to species interactions within ecological systems.
2022
Inglese
14
4
253
11
Esperti anonimi
internazionale
scientifica
Community ecology; Mediterranean island wetlands; Plant–bird interactions; Species traits; Vegetation structure; Wetland conservation; Zoochory
Goal 15: Life on land
no
Fois, M.; Cuena-Lombrana, A.; Zucca, C.; Nissardi, S.; Bacchetta, G.
1.1 Articolo in rivista
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
262
5
open
Files in This Item:
File Size Format  
diversity-14-00253.pdf

open access

Type: versione editoriale
Size 715.83 kB
Format Adobe PDF
715.83 kB Adobe PDF View/Open

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Questionnaire and social

Share on:
Impostazioni cookie