Artigo Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Seasonality in abundance and detection bias of birds in a tropical dry forest in north-eastern South America

2017; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 33; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0266467417000347

ISSN

1469-7831

Autores

Clarisse Caroline de Oliveira e Silva, Mauro Pichorim, Pedro Teófilo Silva de Moura, Leonardo Fernandes França,

Tópico(s)

Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies

Resumo

Abstract: Seasonal fluctuations in bird abundance are expected in semi-arid environments, but estimates may be biased if detectability is not considered. In a tropical dry forest in north-eastern Brazil, we evaluated whether bird abundance is highly seasonal, and associated with time-specific variability in detectability. We mark-recaptured birds with mist nets over three field visits (3487 records from 75 species), and used closed-capture models to estimate detectability and abundance in birds divided into three groups (all, residents, insectivores). In the two dry periods, the best models resulted in capture estimates at least three times larger than recapture, and both estimates were twice that of when rains occurred on the day preceding sampling. Abundance varied between dry and wet periods from 4.0 (from 115 ± 34 to 479 ± 144) to 13 times (183 ± 8 to 2463 ± 351). Estimates were 1.5–3.2 times greater in the dry period when behavioural responses of birds were excluded from capture-recapture models. Meanwhile, in the wet period the relative abundance was between 33–76% smaller than best-fit models estimated. This study found variation in avian abundance greater than that observed in other Neotropical dry forests, and indicates that biases may be common when not including detectability.

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