3 February 2016

Hummingbirds provide insight into food specialisation across the Americas

Ecology

A new study has mapped food specialisation in hummingbird communities across the Americas, leading to a rare documentation of a large scale ecological pattern. It reveals that communities with high levels of food specialisations coincide with a high number of smaller-ranged species. The study provides an evolutionary insight into how and where ecological specialisation might occur. The study was led by the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate at the University of Copenhagen.

A complex network analysis of hummingbirds and the nectar plants they feed on was used to determine the level of resource specialisation in 46 hummingbird communities distributed widely from the Northern USA to Southern Brazil.

The study is published today in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B by a team of more than 30 scientists.

White-necked Jacobin

White-necked Jacobin (Florisuga mellivora). One of the 130 hummingbird species included in the study. Credit: Jesper Sonne Download press photo

“Using hummingbirds as an example, we have demonstrated a distinct pattern for ecological specialisation across a large geographical space. No matter where we look across the Americas it holds true that high food specialisation in a community is linked to a high proportion of smaller-ranged species. The explanation for this is thought to be that a stable climate over a long period of time is able to foster both. Patterns like these help us explain and understand biodiversity on a large scale” says lead author and MSc student Jesper Sonne from the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate at the University of Copenhagen.

Director of the centre Professor Carsten Rahbek adds:

“With this study, we demonstrate that environmental factors such as the climate not only associate with species ranges, but also with local specialisations, such as those between hummingbirds and nectar plants. It gives us an insight into how evolutionary and ecological processes jointly structure biological communities in a broad sense.”

For the hummingbird communities that were investigated, the smallest species ranges were around 40,000 km2 which compares to an area smaller than the size of Denmark, while the largest ranges were about 1,000 times greater. Hummingbirds with even smaller ranges exist but were not included in the study because no information is available on their interactions with plant communities.

Fiery-Throated hummingbird

Fiery-Throated hummingbird (Panterpe insignis) Credit: Jesper Sonne Download photo

The study included 130 hummingbird species, representing ca. 40 % of all hummingbird species. The Volcano Hummingbird (Selasphorus flammula), White-bellied Mountain-gem (Lampornis hemileucus) and Fiery-throated Hummingbird (Panterpe insignis) are all examples of species that were classified as smaller-ranged in the study. All three live only in Costa Rica and western Panama and they were found to be locally specialised to feed on particular nectar plants.

Increased vulnerability of smaller-ranged species

The results also indicate that aggregations of smaller-ranged species are more vulnerable to environmental change than previously thought.

“Species with smaller geographical ranges are naturally more sensitive to environmental change, and if the same community of species is also highly specialised to forage on few food resources, it will be less capable of adapting to a changing environment” says co-author and Assistant Professor Bo Dalsgaard from the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate.

Hummingbirds are excellent model species

Hummingbirds and their nectar plants have long served as model system for examining ecological and evolutionary processes because of their strong mutual dependencies. They are also known to thrive in an array of environments throughout the Americas from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego. Hummingbirds can weigh as little as 2 grams and have extremely diverse bills, adapted to fit their nectar plants.

Link to the article:
Sonne J et al. 2016 High proportion of smaller ranged hummingbird species coincides with ecological specialization across the Americas. Proc. R. Soc. B 20152512.

Contact

MSc student Jesper Sonne
Mobile: +45 26330554
Email: jsonne@snm.ku.dk

Assistant Professor Bo Dalsgaard
Mobile: +45 42324553
Email: bo.dalsgaard@snm.ku.dk