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Dryad

Differential utilization of surface and arboreal water bodies by birds and mammals in a seasonally dry Neotropical forest in southern Mexico

Cite this dataset

Delgado-Martínez, Carlos M.; Kolb, Melanie; Pascual‐Ramírez, Fermín; Mendoza, Eduardo (2023). Differential utilization of surface and arboreal water bodies by birds and mammals in a seasonally dry Neotropical forest in southern Mexico [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.1jwstqk22

Abstract

Water availability significantly influences bird and mammal ecology in terrestrial ecosystems. However, our understanding of the role of water as a limiting resource for birds and mammals remains partial because most of the studies have focused on surface water bodies of desert and semi-desert ecosystems. This study assessed the use of two types of surface water bodies (waterholes and epikarst rock pools) and one arboreal (water-filled tree holes) by birds and mammals in the seasonally dry tropical forests of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve in southern Mexico. We deployed camera traps in 23 waterholes, 22 rock pools, and 19 water-filled tree holes in this karstic region to record visits by small, medium, and large-bodied birds and mammals during the dry and rainy seasons. These cameras were set up to record videos documenting when animals were making use of water for drinking, bathing, or both. We compared the species diversity and composition of bird and mammal assemblages using the different types of water bodies by calculating Hill numbers and conducting non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS), indicator species, and contingency table analyses. There was a greater species richness of birds and mammals using surface water bodies than tree holes during both seasons. There were significant differences in species composition among bird assemblages using the different water bodies, but dominant species and diversity remained the same. Terrestrial and larger mammalian species preferentially used surface water bodies whereas arboreal and scansorial small and medium mammals were more common in arboreal water bodies. These findings suggest that differences in water body characteristics might favor segregation in mammal activity. The different water bodies may act as alternative water sources for birds and complementary sources for mammals, potentially favoring species coexistence and increasing community resilience to environmental variation (e.g., fluctuation in water availability). Understanding how differences in water bodies favor species coexistence and community resilience is of great relevance from a basic ecological perspective but is also crucial for anticipating the effects that the increased demand for water by humans and climate change can have on wildlife viability.

README: Differential utilization of surface and arboreal water bodies by birds and mammals in a seasonally dry Neotropical forest in southern Mexico

https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.1jwstqk22

This dataset contains the records and capture frequencies of birds and mammals recorded by camera trapping using surface and arboreal water bodies in the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve throughout a year. We also provide the corresponding code to conduct the analyses

Description of the data and file structure

body mass.csv

This file contains the body mass in kilograms of bird and mammal species in Mexico. It is used to match the body mass of species recorded in water bodies and to classify the species into categories. The columns correspond to the scientific name and body mass of each species.

locomotion.csv

This file contains the locomotion mode of bird and mammal species recorded using water bodies. It is used to match the locomotion type of the recorded species. The columns correspond to the scientific name, class, and locomotion type of each species.

cf_birds_dry.csv, cf_birds_rainy.csv, cf_mammals_dry.csv, and cf_mammals_rainy.csv

These files contain capture frequency data for bird and mammal species recorded in various water bodies during the dry and rainy seasons. The data is arranged as matrices with species' scientific names as columns and site names as rows.

events.csv

This file contains independent events of birds and mammals recorded using water bodies in the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve. Coordinates of sites can be provided upon reasonable request. Each column contains the following information.

Column Entry Value Explanation
A Date Numerical Date and time of event (DD/MM/YYYY HH:MM)
B StationID Categorical Camera trap station where the event was recorded
C Season Categorical Season when the event was recorded
D Water_body Categorical Type of water body
E Class Categorical Vertebrate class
F SpeciesID Categorical Scientific name
G Temperature Numerical Temperature recorded by the camera trap (°C)
H Individuals Numerical Maximum number of individuals in the event
I Independ Numerical All of them 1, just for reference in the analyses

Code/Software

R software (version 4.3.1) was used to run the analyses. Two scripts, corresponding to composition and Hill number analyses, are included in the files. Each script provides highly detailed information about the required packages and steps.

Funding

Rufford Foundation, Award: 34365-2

Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Award: Seed Research Grant 2022

American Society of Mammalogists, Award: Latin American Student Field Research Award 2022