Quantifying landscape-level biodiversity change in an island ecosystem: A 50-year assessment of shifts in the Hawaiian avian community
Hawaii has experienced profound declines in native avifauna alongside the introduction of numerous bird species. While site-specific population studies are common, landscape-level analyses of avian population dynamics are rare, particularly in island ecosystems. To address this gap, we used a density surface model to create a spatio-temporal projection of population densities and distributions across the Island of Hawai‘i, spanning nearly five decades (1976–2023). We incorporated environmental covariates of habitat, precipitation, and elevation, to further refine our projections. Our analysis encompassed nine native and six non-native bird species, inhabiting a range of ecological niches. We found five out of nine native species have declined in density and range size while four were stable. For non-native species, two were stable, one was decreasing, and three were increasing in density and range size. Our landscape projections can inform management by suggesting areas critical for habitat preservation and land acquisition for conservation, identifying where range fragmentation is occurring, and pinpointing locations of multi-species declines that are likely driven by a common cause. Our study demonstrates how long-term, landscape-level monitoring and analyses can advance understanding and addressing biodiversity loss, particularly in vulnerable tropical island ecosystems.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2025 |
|---|---|
| Title | Quantifying landscape-level biodiversity change in an island ecosystem: A 50-year assessment of shifts in the Hawaiian avian community |
| DOI | 10.1002/ecog.07907 |
| Authors | Trevor Bak, Lucas Fortini, Noah Hunt, Paul Banko, Lena Schnell, Richard Camp |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | Ecography |
| Index ID | 70272231 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center |