Altitudinal migration and the future of an iconic Hawaiian honeycreeper in response to climate change and management
Authored by Alban Guillaumet, Wendy A Kuntz, Michael D Samuel, Eben H Paxton
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1002/ecm.1253
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://zenodo.org/record/251368#.XGy74oWcEsk
Abstract
Altitudinal movement by tropical birds to track seasonally variable
resources can move them from protected areas to areas of increased
vulnerability. In Hawai?i, historical reports suggest that many Hawaiian
honeycreepers such as the Iiwi (Drepanis coccinea) once undertook
seasonal migrations, but the existence of such movements today is
unclear. Because Hawaiian honeycreepers are highly susceptible to avian
malaria, currently minimal in high-elevation forests, understanding the
degree to which honeycreepers visit lower elevation forests may be
critical to predict the current impact of malaria on population dynamics
and how susceptible bird populations may respond to climate change and
mitigation scenarios. Using radio telemetry data, we demonstrate for the
first time that a large fraction of breeding adult and juvenile Iiwi
originating from an upper-elevation (1,920m) population at Hakalau
Forest National Wildlife Refuge exhibit post-breeding movements well
below the upper elevational limit for mosquitoes. Bloom data suggest
seasonal variation in floral resources is the primary driver of seasonal
movement for Iiwi. To understand the demographic implications of such
movement, we developed a spatial individual-based model calibrated using
previously published and original data. ?Iiwi dynamics were simulated
backward in time, to estimate population levels in the absence of avian
malaria, and forward in time, to assess the impact of climate warming as
well as two potential mitigation actions. Even in disease-free refuge'
populations, we found that breeding densities failed to reach the
estimated carrying capacity, suggesting the existence of a seasonal
migration load as a result of travel to disease-prevalent areas. We
predict that Iiwi may be on the verge of extinction in 2100, with the
total number of pairs reaching only +/- 0.2-12.3\% of the estimated
pre-malaria density, based on an optimistic climate change scenario. The
probability of extinction of Iiwi populations, as measured by population
estimates for 2100, is strongly related to their estimated migration
propensity. Long-term conservation strategies likely will require a
multi-pronged response including a reduction of malaria threats, habitat
restoration and continued landscape-level access to seasonally variable
nectar resources.
Tags
Individual-based model
Climate change
demographics
Conservation
population
Availability
Telemetry
Cloud forest
``i{''}iwi
Altitudinal migration
Avian malaria
Hawaii
Malaria plasmodium-relictum
Amakihi hemignathus-virens
Metrosideros-polymorpha
Elevational gradient
Nectarivorous birds
Vestiaria-coccinea