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Dryad

Climate change aggravates bird mortality in pristine tropical forests

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Oct 17, 2024 version files 364.65 KB

Abstract

Stable understory microclimates within undisturbed rainforests are commonly regarded as refugia against climate change. Yet, this assertion has rarely been tested, and contrasts with pervasive population declines observed for many bird species in Amazonian forests unaffected by landscape change or direct exploitation. We tested if population vulnerability of resident rainforest birds may stem from climatic effects, particularly during dry seasons with elevated temperatures and reduced rainfall. Data from 4264 individual bird captures collected over 27 years reveal strong negative consequences of harsher dry-season conditions on survival for 27 of 29 species; an increase of 1° C reduced the aggregate survival of the understory bird community by 34%. These results link climate change to demographic processes in the heart of Amazonian rainforest, raising doubts about the capacity of pristine rainforests to protect their unparalleled biodiversity under increasingly severe climate change.