Data from: Biological traits and biome features mediate responses of terrestrial bird demography to droughts
Data files
Oct 17, 2024 version files 236.61 KB
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Appendix1_Zhang_et_al._2024.xls
232.45 KB
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README.md
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Abstract
Changing drought regimes are a rising threat to biodiversity, yet their impacts on wildlife vary greatly. Acknowledging the factors associated with these consequences brings novel insights into species vulnerability resulting from extreme climatic events and facilitates effective mitigation of climate change risks. Based on 319 observations from 29 peer-reviewed studies on birds—a well-monitored taxonomic group—we extract the responses of demographic metrics to droughts for 204 species across eight terrestrial biomes to examine the consequences of droughts. Based on relevant studies, we choose the factors potentially moderating bird demography under droughts, and complied the data for these factors from published datasets. A meta-analysis is performed to determine the drought effect on bird demography at individual and population levels, accounting for the influence of species traits, timescale and severity of droughts, and biome features. The results show that droughts have an overall negative effect on bird demography, and the effect is mediated by different factors at each level. For individuals exposed to droughts, declines in demographic rates are found to be related to narrower extents of occurrence of species, and a significant overall reduction in demographic rates is identified for individuals residing in deserts and xeric shrublands. At the population level, declines in abundance or reproductive performance are generally identified for invertivores, frugivores, nectarivores, and omnivores; short-lived species with small clutch sizes also show greater susceptibilities under the impacts of droughts. Our findings additionally suggest that the demographic vulnerability of bird individuals and populations could be affected by the duration and magnitude of drought episodes. Although our results are subject to publication bias, these conclusions advance the assessment of vulnerability to extreme climatic events that used to be based on equally weighted species traits and support bird conservation by prioritizing the declining populations of species with drought-susceptible traits.
README: Data from: Biological traits and biome features mediate responses of terrestrial bird demography to droughts
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2bvq83c0w
Description of the data and file structure
Appendix 1: The dataset for meta-analyses including the demographic responses of populations of 204 bird species to droughts compiled from 29 publications between 1985 and 2023.
Appendix 2: The phylogeny tree of 204 bird species examined for the responses to droughts at individual or population level. The calculation of the phylogenetic distance of species included in the analysis was based on the phylogenetic tree, which was built with the highest overall clade support from a sample of 1,000 phylogenetic trees from the global phylogeny of birds (Jetz et al. 2012) using the maximum-clade-credibility method.
Files and variables
File: Appendix1_Zhang_et_al._2024.xlsx
Description:
Variables:
Case_ID: Case identity
Study_ID: Study (publication) identity
Common_ID: Cases shared the same non-drought level (control) have the same common_ID
Author(s): Last names of authors
Publish year: The year when the study was published Study period: The period over which the study was conducted Drought period: The period which was reported as “drought” in the study Drought gradient: The gradient of drought severity reported in the study. "Uni" indicates the study has only one drought level; for the studies with multiple drought gradients, the ID of each gradient was listed in this column.
Latitude: The latitude of the study site
Longitude: The longitude of the study site
Species: Species name
Order: The taxonomic order of the species
Biological level: The biological organization level where the response occurred
Response metric: The metric used in the study to measure individual or population responses to droughts ne:Sample size at the drought site
nc: Sample size at the non-drought site
me: The mean of a response metric at the drought site
mc: The mean of a response metric at the non-drought site
SDe: Standard deviation of a response metric at the drought site
SDc: Standard deviation of a response metric at the non-drought site
yi: Effect size of a response metric
vi: Standard deviations of a response metric
Adult body mass (g): Published values, with missing values extrapolated with a taxonomic hierarchy approach by Bird et al. 2020
Diet type: Fruits and nectar; Invertebrate; Omnivore; Plants and seeds; Vertebrate and scavenging
EOO (km2): Extent of occurrence
Habitat dependency: Whether the species is a specialist to one habitat type or a non-specialist
Maximum longevity (years): Published values, with missing values extrapolated with a taxonomic hierarchy approach by Bird et al. (2020)
Mean clutch size: The average number of eggs laid in a single brood by a nesting pair of birds
Movement type: Altitudinal Migrant, Full Migrant, Not a Migrant, Nomadic
Terrestrial biome: The type of terrestrial biome (Olson et al. 2001) where the response was documented, including TS-BMF: Tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests; TS-DBF: Tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests; TS-CF: Tropical and subtropical coniferous forests; T-BMF: Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests; T-CF: Temperate coniferous forests; B-TF: Boreal forests/Taiga; TS-GSS: Tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands; T-GSS: Temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands; FL-GS: Flooded grasslands and savannas; MT-GS: Montane grasslands and shrublands; TUN: Tundra; MES-FWS: Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub’; DES-XS: Deserts and Xeric shrublands; MANG: Mangroves; LAK: Lakes; RI: Rock and ice
RCL: The latitude of range centroid
dm3: Drought magnitude at 3-month time scale
df3: Drought frequency at 3-month time scale
dm12: Drought magnitude at 12-month time scale
df12: Drought frequency at 12-month time scale
Missing values are indicated with "NA"