Long-term changes in the avifauna of Barro Colorado Island, Panama, a tropical forest isolate

Since its isolation from the mainland more than 85 years ago, 65 bird species have disappeared from Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Because of these extinctions the island is often used as a model for the study of faunal relaxation, or loss of species through time. The most recent survey of the islan...

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Published in:Conservation biology Vol. 13; no. 1; pp. 85 - 97
Main Author: Robinson, W. Douglas
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Boston, MA, USA Blackwell Science Inc 01-02-1999
Blackwell Science
Blackwell
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Summary:Since its isolation from the mainland more than 85 years ago, 65 bird species have disappeared from Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Because of these extinctions the island is often used as a model for the study of faunal relaxation, or loss of species through time. The most recent survey of the island's bird community was completed in 1970. Between June 1994 and May 1996 I surveyed the island and observed 218 species, including 5 species never before recorded. Three relatively sedentary species have experienced severe population declines since Willis's 1970 survey and may be on the brink of disappearing from the island. Willis estimated 500 Slate-colored Grosbeaks (Pitylus grossus), whereas I found only two pairs of this conspicuous midstory-dwelling finch. Two cotingas-Speckled Mourner (Laniocera rufescens) and Rufous Piha (Lipaugus unirufus)-have declined by 85-95%. I did not locate any individuals of 36 other species that were present during the 1970s. Most (21) of these are uncommon aquatic or nocturnal species, which I may have missed during my surveys, or are rare to uncommon edge species that probably move frequently to and from the island. Seven species, however, are primarily inhabitants of second-growth forest and have been lost probably because of continuing successional maturation of the forest, including changes in land use around the laboratory clearing. Seven forest-dwelling species disappeared during the 1970s and have not recolonized. I detected only one sedentary forest-dwelling species, Great Currasow (Crax rubra), that previously had been reported as missing from the island. The nearly complete lack of recolonizations by such forest-interior species suggests that local extinction from tropical forest isolates may be extremely persistent. Tropical forest reserves as small as Barro Colorado Island (1600 ha) may not preserve high levels of regional avian diversity over long periods of time.
Bibliography:P01
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1999003840
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ArticleID:COBI97492
istex:0B91155F4E683F78C62553492C4139CCA35D119B
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0888-8892
1523-1739
DOI:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.97492.x