Title
Alpine Birds of South America
Date Issued
01 January 2020
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
book part
Author(s)
Sevillano-Ríos C.S.
Sevillano-Ríos C.S.
Rodewald A.D.
Rodewald A.D.
Morales L.V.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Cornell University
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Cornell University
The School for Field Studies Center for Amazon Studies
Abstract
In South America, “alpine birds” are those bird species inhabiting the High Andes (>2500masl). The study of this group has progressed from the inventories and catalogues of expeditions led by 19th-century European naturalists to ecological studies of their distribution, work which has enabled the production of country-specific field guides allowing for continued study by new generations of local researchers and amateurs alike. There are six predominant Andean ecosystems that alpine birds of South America inhabit: Paramo, Puna, high-Andean wetlands and water bodies, high-Andean forests, human-modified areas and glaciers. Here, we describe high-Andean bird diversity according to its distribution throughout these six ecosystems and discuss threats to bird populations and conservation approaches. Altogether, these habitats host a species-rich group of 945 species, composed of both resident and migratory species, generalists and also highly specialized, endemic birds. Because many are specialized, mountain-top species, adapted to live within narrow elevational ranges and climatic conditions, one of the greatest conservation concerns facing South American alpine birds is the threat posed by climate change. Although upslope migration appears to be a viable strategy for some species, there is also evidence that others, especially many endemic mountaintop species, could become locally extinct as a consequence of global change. The decoupling of species-habitat and other ecological relationships that could arise from altitudinal migration may be particularly serious for highly specialized birds of Paramos, Polylepis forests, and wetlands. Due to the high vulnerability of South American alpine birds to climate change, it is important to undertake actions for the conservation and restoration of the ecosystems on which they depend as habitat, ranging from legal protection to education.
Start page
V1
Volume
May 1
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85174093816
Resource of which it is part
May Encyclopedia of the World's Biomes: Volumes 1
ISBN of the container
[9780128160961]
Sources of information: Scopus Directorio de Producción Científica