Changes in functional traits and resources reduce the specialization of hummingbirds in fragmented landscapes

Pollinator specialization, crucial for the stability of plant-pollinator interactions, can be affected by habitat loss and fragmentation; however, the pathways that induce these changes are poorly understood. We aim to understand the underlying factors by which habitat loss, fragmentation, and veget...

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Main Authors: Ariana Vélez, Catherine H. Graham, Ibeth P. Alarcón, Ruth Arias, Santiago Cárdenas-Calle, Omar Landázuri, Carlos Iván Espinosa, Boris A. Tinoco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-04-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989425000708
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Summary:Pollinator specialization, crucial for the stability of plant-pollinator interactions, can be affected by habitat loss and fragmentation; however, the pathways that induce these changes are poorly understood. We aim to understand the underlying factors by which habitat loss, fragmentation, and vegetation structure change species specialization of hummingbirds and consequently influence community robustness in tropical montane forests of southern Ecuador. We used a piecewise structural equation model to simultaneously analyze the influence of functional traits of pollinators and resource availability as pathways driving the changes in specialization, resulting from an increase in habitat loss, fragmentation, and simplification of vegetation structure. We found that fragmentation reduces hummingbird specialization by filtering out hummingbirds with long bills. In addition, we observed that forest edges have greater floral diversity associated with a decrease in hummingbird specialization. The observed shift towards generalization in hummingbird assemblages, related to the transformation of landscapes, appears to promote more robust communities capable of sustaining hummingbird populations. However, morphologically specialized pollinators can be highly sensitive to fragmentation and even become locally extinct when fragmentation increases in a landscape. We conclude that while fragmented habitats may maintain robust communities, specialist species, often with unique ecological functions, may be lost.
ISSN:2351-9894