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Species richness,phylogenetic and functional structure of bird communities in Chinese university campuses are associated with divergent variables
Authors:Wenjing Zhang  Chenxia Liang  Jun Liu  Xingfeng Si  Gang Feng
Institution:1.College of Life Sciences,Inner Mongolia University,Hohhot,China;2.Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Ecology and Resource Use of the Mongolian Plateau & Inner Mongolia Key Laboratory of Grassland Ecology, School of Ecology and Environment,Inner Mongolia University,Hohhot,China;3.School of Ecological and Environmental Sciences,East China Normal University,Shanghai,China;4.Department of Biological Sciences,University of Toronto-Scarborough,Toronto,Canada;5.College of Life Sciences,Zhejiang University,Hangzhou,China
Abstract:University campus is an important component of urban landscapes for biodiversity conservation. However, to our knowledge no study has quantitatively assessed the diversity and structure of bird communities in Chinese university campuses, especially from phylogenetic and functional perspectives. Here, for the first time we linked species richness, phylogenetic structure and body mass structure of campus bird communities with contemporary climate, glacial-interglacial climate change, altitudinal range, population density around campus, area and age of campus to test their associations. We found 393 bird species in 38 university campuses (29% of all Chinese bird species, two species are endangered, four species are vulnerable, and 33 species are near threatened). The variables significantly correlated with campus bird species richness, phylogenetic structure and body mass structure were altitudinal range and mean annual precipitation, glacial-interglacial anomaly in temperature, and altitudinal range, respectively. In particular, there were more species in steeper and wetter campuses, more young species clustered in campuses with stable glacial-interglacial climate, and more species with smaller body size in steeper campuses. Our study highlights the importance of considering both phylogenetic and functional information for biodiversity conservation in urban ecosystems.
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