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Unravelling species co‐occurrence in a steppe bird community of Inner Mongolia: Insights for the conservation of the endangered Jankowski’s Bunting
Author(s) -
Han Zheng,
Zhang Lishi,
Jiang Yunlei,
Wang Haitao,
Jiguet Frédéric
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
diversity and distributions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.918
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1472-4642
pISSN - 1366-9516
DOI - 10.1111/ddi.13061
Subject(s) - ecology , endangered species , steppe , habitat , abiotic component , geography , biotic component , biology
Aim To evaluate the patterns of bird assemblage and distribution in an endangered grassland system, taking into accounts both environmental and biotic effects. To further focus on an endangered songbird and associated steppe birds. Location Inner Mongolia, China. Methods We investigated the relative importance of abiotic and biotic factors driving the abundance and co‐occurrence of steppe birds in Inner Mongolia by using joint species distribution models. We examined the general patterns of species assemblage, with a focus on the endangered Jankowski's Bunting and other species potentially sharing the same niche or interacting with it, including potential competitors (especially the closely related Meadow Bunting), predators (corvids, raptors) and a parasite (cuckoo). Results The studied steppe species exhibited varied responses to environmental variables, including climate, landscape and habitat predictors. We observed stronger species correlations due to residual covariates than to abiotic covariates. Jankowski's Bunting displayed strong positive co‐occurrences with other ground‐nesting songbirds and exhibited significant responses to all measured habitat and climate variables, indicating that this endangered bird has a high niche specialization and wide associations with other sympatric steppe bird species. Main conclusion Our results pointed out that climate, landscape and steppe habitat predictors are not the only factors structuring bird assemblages. Our results suggested that Jankowski's Bunting is an indicator of the occurrence of other species, especially open‐nesting specialized steppe songbirds, so it could act as a surrogate for overall steppe bird conservation. These findings are helpful for understanding how abiotic and biotic processes interactively alter bird communities and making effective management decisions to mitigate multiple threats to the entire community.

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