Long-term monitoring reveals widespread and severe declines of understory birds in a protected Neotropical forest

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Apr 19;119(16):e2108731119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2108731119. Epub 2022 Apr 4.

Abstract

Long-term studies on the population dynamics of tropical resident birds are few, and it remains poorly understood how their populations have fared in recent decades. Here, we analyzed a 44-y population study of a Neotropical understory bird assemblage from a protected forest reserve in central Panama to determine if and how populations have changed from 1977 to 2020. Using the number of birds captured in mist nets as an index of local abundance, we estimated trends over time for a diverse suite of 57 resident species that comprised a broad range of ecological and behavioral traits. Estimated abundances of 40 (∼70%) species declined over the sampling period, whereas only 2 increased. Furthermore, declines were severe: 35 of the 40 declining species exhibited large proportional losses in estimated abundance, amounting to ≥50% of their initial estimated abundances. Declines were largely independent of ecology (i.e., body mass, foraging guild, or initial abundance) or phylogenetic affiliation. These widespread, severe declines are particularly alarming, given that they occurred in a relatively large (∼22,000-ha) forested area in the absence of local fragmentation or recent land-use change. Our findings provide robust evidence of tropical bird declines in intact forests and bolster a large body of literature from temperate regions suggesting that bird populations may be declining at a global scale. Identifying the ecological mechanisms underlying these declines should be an urgent conservation priority.

Keywords: biodiversity loss; intact forest; long-term studies; population declines; tropical birds.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biodiversity
  • Birds*
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Panama
  • Population Dynamics
  • Rainforest*