Journal
ORNITHOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 123, Issue 1, Pages -Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ornithapp/duaa059
Keywords
breeding bird; caterpillars; insect decline; Neotropical migrants; ornamental plants
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Funding
- United States Department of Agriculture Hatch
- United States Department of Agriculture McIntire Stennis support
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Recent studies have shown widespread declines in insect and bird populations, with insect decline hypothesized to be a significant factor contributing to the reduction of insectivorous bird populations. The specialization on host plants, food limitation in birds, fluctuation of insectivorous bird populations with insect prey supply, and the decline of terrestrial birds dependent on insects support this hypothesis. Understanding the consequences of insect declines can motivate actions to favor native plant species that support insect herbivores and reverse these declines.
A flurry of recently published studies indicates that both insects and birds have experienced wide-scale population declines in the last several decades. Curiously, whether insect and bird declines are causally linked has received little empirical attention. Here, we hypothesize that insect declines are an important factor contributing to the decline of insectivorous birds. We further suggest that insect populations essential to insectivorous birds decline whenever nonnative lumber, ornamental, or invasive plant species replace native plant communities. We support our hypothesis by reviewing studies that show (1) due to host plant specialization, insect herbivores typically do poorly on non-native plants; (2) birds are often food limited; (3) populations of insectivorous bird species fluctuate with the supply of essential insect prey; (4) not all arthropod prey support bird reproduction equally well; and (5) terrestrial birds for which insects are an essential source of food have declined by 2.9 billion individuals over the last 50 years, while terrestrial birds that do not depend on insects during their life history have gained by 26.2 million individuals, a 111-fold difference. Understanding the consequences of insect declines, particularly as they affect charismatic animals like birds, may motivate land managers, homeowners, and restoration ecologists to take actions that reverse these declines by favoring the native plant species that support insect herbivores most productively.
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