TY - JOUR
T1 - Marine subsidies mediate patterns in avian island biogeography
AU - Obrist, Debora S.
AU - Hanly, Patrick J.
AU - Kennedy, Jeremiah C.
AU - Fitzpatrick, Owen T.
AU - Wickham, Sara B.
AU - Ernst, Christopher M.
AU - Nijland, Wiebe
AU - Reshitnyk, Luba Y.
AU - Darimont, Chris T.
AU - Starzomski, Brian M.
AU - Reynolds, John D.
PY - 2020/3/11
Y1 - 2020/3/11
N2 - The classical theory of island biogeography, which predicts species richness using island area and isolation, has been expanded to include contributions from marine subsidies, i.e. subsidized island biogeography (SIB) theory. We tested the effects of marine subsidies on species diversity and population density on productive temperate islands, evaluating SIB predictions previously untested at comparable scales and subsidy levels. We found that the diversity of terrestrial breeding bird communities on 91 small islands (approx. 0.0001-3 km2) along the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada were correlated most strongly with island area, but also with marine subsidies. Species richness increased and population density decreased with island area, but isolation had no measurable influence. Species richness was negatively correlated with marine subsidy, measured as forest-edge soil δ15N. Density, however, was higher on islands with higher marine subsidy, and a negative interaction between area and subsidy indicates that this effect is stronger on smaller islands, offering some support for SIB. Our study emphasizes how subsidies from the sea can shape diversity patterns on islands and can even exceed the importance of isolation in determining species richness and densities of terrestrial biota.
AB - The classical theory of island biogeography, which predicts species richness using island area and isolation, has been expanded to include contributions from marine subsidies, i.e. subsidized island biogeography (SIB) theory. We tested the effects of marine subsidies on species diversity and population density on productive temperate islands, evaluating SIB predictions previously untested at comparable scales and subsidy levels. We found that the diversity of terrestrial breeding bird communities on 91 small islands (approx. 0.0001-3 km2) along the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada were correlated most strongly with island area, but also with marine subsidies. Species richness increased and population density decreased with island area, but isolation had no measurable influence. Species richness was negatively correlated with marine subsidy, measured as forest-edge soil δ15N. Density, however, was higher on islands with higher marine subsidy, and a negative interaction between area and subsidy indicates that this effect is stronger on smaller islands, offering some support for SIB. Our study emphasizes how subsidies from the sea can shape diversity patterns on islands and can even exceed the importance of isolation in determining species richness and densities of terrestrial biota.
KW - avian ecology
KW - island biogeography
KW - marine-derived nutrients
KW - spatial subsidies
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85081669233&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1098/rspb.2020.0108
DO - 10.1098/rspb.2020.0108
M3 - Article
C2 - 32156206
AN - SCOPUS:85081669233
SN - 0962-8452
VL - 287
JO - Proceedings. Biological sciences
JF - Proceedings. Biological sciences
IS - 1922
ER -