Invasive species pose a major threat to forest biodiversity, particularly on islands such as the Galapágos. Here, invasive plants are threatening the remnants of the unique cloud forest and its iconic Darwin's finches. We posit that food web disturbances caused by invasive Rubus niveus (blackberry), have contributed to the rapid decline of the insectivourous green warbler finch (Certhidae olivacea). We compared the birds' dietary changes in long-term management, short-term management and unmanaged areas. We measured C:N ratios, and δ15N‑nitrogen and δ13C‑carbon values in both consumer tissues (bird-blood) and food sources (arthropods), as indicators of resource use change, and collected mass abundance, and arthropod diversity data. We characterised the birds' diets using isotope mixing models. The results revealed that finches in (blackberry-invaded) unmanaged areas foraged more on abundant, yet lower quality, arthropods present in the invaded understory. This suggests that blackberry encroachment leads to a decrease in food source quality with physiological consequences for green warbler finch chicks. Results also implied that blackberry control has a short-term impact on food source quantity, which led to a decrease in chick recruitment that we observed in our previous studies; despite this, in the long-term, these managed systems show signs of recovery within three years of restoration.
Plant invasion causes alterations in Darwin's finch feeding patterns in Galápagos cloud forests.
R. Hood-Nowotny,Ingrid Rabitsch,Arno Cimadom,Marcela Suarez-Rubio,A. Watzinger,P. Yáñez,C. Schulze,S. Zechmeister-Boltenstern,H. Jäger,S. Tebbich
Published 2023 in Science of the Total Environment
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- Publication year
2023
- Venue
Science of the Total Environment
- Publication date
2023-06-24
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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