Diversity in Irish and British avifauna assemblages: What can variation in diversity profiles reveal about the forces that drive assemblage composition and structure?
Camille Groh, Gavin M. Siriwardena, Barry J. McMahon

TL;DR
This study compares bird diversity in Ireland and Britain, showing how land use and species traits shape avian assemblages.
Contribution
The study introduces diversity profiles as a more informative tool than traditional indices for analyzing bird assemblages.
Findings
The Irish avifauna is a complete subset of the British avifauna.
Ireland has more insectivorous farmland birds, while Britain has more seed-eating farmland birds.
British assemblages show higher diversity, driven by genetically distinct species.
Abstract
Ireland and Britain are two islands located at Europe's westernmost edge, both of which act as the final breeding outposts for many bird species within their European ranges. Despite their similar geographic locations and geological histories, Ireland and Britain host different breeding avifauna assemblages. Diversity profiles, which can serve as more robust alternatives to classic diversity indices, were employed in this study to explore disparities in the two islands' breeding avifauna assemblages. Variations in assemblages were explored, along with their potential drivers, through analyses at three levels: island‐scale breeding bird assemblage compositions, island‐scale diversity profiles considering 49 common breeding species, and habitat‐specific diversity profiles considering assemblages in east/central Irish farmland and East Anglian farmland. Analysis of the two islands'…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsWildlife Ecology and Conservation · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Species Distribution and Climate Change
