Introduction
South-east Asian biodiversity is collapsing (Sodhi et al., Reference Sodhi, Koh, Brook and Ng2004) as a consequence of habitat degradation and loss, mostly because of large-scale clearance for agriculture and infrastructure development (Laurence et al., Reference Laurence, Sayer and Cassman2014; Laurance & Arrea, Reference Laurance and Arrea2017). Primary forest in the lowlands of South-east Asia, extending from the plains to the foothills (Wells, Reference Wells, Medway and Wells1976), has declined by > 50% over the past 20 years (Namkhan et al., Reference Namkhan, Gale, Savini and Tantipisanuh2021). This raises concern for threatened lowland forest biodiversity (Aratrakorn et al., Reference Aratrakorn, Thunhikorn and Donald2006), particularly in the unique and relatively pristine lowland forest transition zone surrounding the Isthmus of Kra, where Sundaic and Indochinese faunas meet (Hughes et al., Reference Hughes, Round and Woodruff2003).
The region supports several threatened species, including the Critically Endangered helmeted hornbill Buceros vigil and Sunda pangolin Manis javanica, the Endangered white-handed gibbon Hylobates lar, Malayan tapir Tapirus indicus, Indochinese tiger Panthera tigris and dhole Cuon alpinus, and the Vulnerable large green pigeon Treron capellei. Gurney's pitta Hydrornis gurneyi (Passeriformes, Pittidae) is endemic to this transition zone and its habitat has decreased by > 80% during 1999–2017 as a consequence of large-scale oil palm expansion, small-scale betel nut cultivation, and infrastructure development (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020). This substantial habitat loss, combined with the fact that the species is considered functionally extinct in neighbouring Thailand (Round, Reference Round2014), led to its recategorization as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List in 2019 (BirdLife International, Reference BirdLife International2019). The threat status had previously been lowered to Endangered in 2008, after the discovery of what was thought to be a large population in southern Myanmar, although the continuing threats to the species' habitat were acknowledged (Donald et al., Reference Donald, Aratrakorn, Htun, Eames, Hla and Thunhikorn2009). The reassessment as Critically Endangered is justified by a drastic population decline resulting from ongoing deforestation throughout the species’ remaining range. A major concern is that none of the remaining core habitat is currently protected, and it is uncertain whether it will be in the future (BirdLife International, Reference BirdLife International2019). The threats to the species are thus expected to continue or increase as a result of rapid economic growth following Myanmar's return to democracy in 2011 (Donald et al., Reference Donald, Round, Aung, Grindley, Steinmetz and Shwe2015; BirdLife International, Reference BirdLife International2019).
Here, we aimed to update information on the status of remaining Gurney's pitta habitat and document any change since the previous estimate in 2017 (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020), investigate the status of the three remaining strongholds (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020) with particular focus on forest patches > 20 km2, and predict future change in lowland forest habitat in the absence of effective intervention.
Study area
This study covers the entire remaining range of Gurney's pitta in the Tanintharyi Region (Hume, Reference Hume1875), southern Myanmar (Donald et al., Reference Donald, Hla, Win, Aung, Moses and Zaw2014; Fig. 1a), at an altitude of 19–672 m. There is a dry season (November–March), with a monthly rainfall of < 100 mm, and a wet season (April–October), with a mean monthly rainfall of 750 mm (Baskett, Reference Baskett2015). The area was originally covered by evergreen forest, but the natural vegetation has been degraded since 1999 by extensive conversion to oil palm plantation and small-scale agriculture (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020).
Methods
Suitable habitat in 2020
We defined closed-canopy forest and degraded primary forest with bamboo at < 150 m altitude and on slopes < 10° as habitat suitable for Gurney's pitta (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020). We obtained slope and altitude data from ASTER Global Digital Elevation Map (30 m resolution; Abrams et al., Reference Abrams, Crippen and Fujisada2020) and defined the extent of suitable habitat using the reclassify toolbox in ArcGIS 10.3 (Esri, Redlands, USA). We identified suitable forest cover for 2020 from Landsat 8 Enhanced Thematic Mapper satellite images (30 m resolution), derived from EarthExplorer (USGS, 2020). We categorized land cover as forest and non-forest, with only forest areas considered suitable for Gurney's pitta, and assessed recent forest decline by comparing forest cover in January 2020 with that from 2017 (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020).
Strongholds of remaining habitat
We assessed the suitable habitat in each of the three remaining strongholds (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020) using the forest cover map from January 2020. When rediscovered in southern Thailand in 1986, the species inhabited a c. 30 km2 lowland forest patch fragmented by clearings and rubber plantations (Round, Reference Round2014). However, as patches of suitable habitat > 30 km2 are limited in the Tanintharyi Region, the stronghold was defined as a forested area including only habitat patches > 20 km2, each of which may hold a population of 140–200 pairs, according to preliminary distance sampling data from an ongoing large-scale survey (NMS, unpubl. data). We removed all forest fragments < 1 km2 from the analysis, as these are unlikely to sustain viable populations in the long term.
Hotspots of forest loss
We investigated spatio-temporal trends in forest loss throughout the known range of Gurney's pitta using the Emerging Hot Spot Analysis tool in ArcGIS (Harris et al. Reference Harris, Goldman, Gabris, Nordling, Minnemeyer and Ansari2017). The tool first conducts a hotspot analysis using the Getis–Ord Gi* statistic (Ord & Getis, Reference Ord and Getis1995) to identify statistically significant spatial clustering patterns. Once spatial clustering patterns (so-called hot and cold spots) are identified, the tool evaluates temporal changes in the patterns using a Mann–Kendall test (Mann, Reference Mann1945; Kendall & Gibbons, Reference Kendall and Gibbons1990) to determine whether deforestation rates are constant, increasing or decreasing over time. For our analysis, we used raster data of annual forest loss during 2000–2018, with a resolution of 30 m (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Potapov, Moore, Hancher, Turubanova and Tyukavina2013) and limited to the extant habitat of Gurney's pitta in 1999 (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020). Prior to our analysis, we converted the annual forest loss data to a netCDF (network common data form) space-time cube using the Create Space Time Cube tool in ArcGIS, to aggregate forest loss events within space-time bins. The tool tallies the number of forest loss events within each hexagonal bin, defined here with a spatial and temporal resolution of 250 m (the width of each 5.4 ha hexagon) and 1 year, respectively. The Emerging Hot Spot Analysis tool then compares the number of forest loss events within each bin to those within a predefined neighbourhood distance (in our case 2.5 km) and the global average to calculate relevant statistics. By default, the Emerging Hot Spot Analysis tool categorizes each bin into one of 17 distinct spatio-temporal categories (one category for bins with no significant deviation from the neighbouring areas/global average, plus eight hotspot and eight cold spot categories; Esri, 2016). We focused our analysis on the hotspots, which we aggregated into two categories to determine the risk of future forest loss: new hotspots with significant, recent forest loss (i.e. areas that became statistically significant hotspots after 2017), and other hotspots (i.e. all hotspot areas not categorized as new) where forest loss was either consistent over a longer period or sporadic (scattered in time and isolated in space). We then overlaid these hotspots on a map of the remaining strongholds of Gurney's pitta habitat, to identify hotspots of forest loss within each stronghold.
Estimating future habitat decline
We predicted the spatial distribution of future forest loss using a Bayesian linear model. We assumed a constant rate of forest loss (the historical loss rate) and determined the fate of 47 suitable habitat patches > 20 km2 using data from 1999, 2003, 2012, 2017 and 2020. The prior model parameters were set with a normal distribution of intercept and coefficients, and an exponential distribution of standard deviation. We defined the year as a predictor variable, to predict a response variable, the logarithm of the area of suitable habitat patches > 20 km2 each year. We set 4,000 as the posterior sample size to express the plausible range of posterior distribution results. We conducted the analysis using the packages rstanarm and rstan (McElreath, Reference McElreath2019) in R 4.0.2 (R Development Core Team, 2014).
Results
Suitable habitat in 2020
In January 2020, lowland forest cover was 603 km2 in the three strongholds, a reduction of c. 8% compared to 2017 (Fig. 2a). When all unsuitable fragments < 1 km2 were removed, the remaining suitable habitat covered 476 km2, of which 63% (378 km2) was in five larger patches > 20 km2 (Fig. 1a).
Strongholds of remaining habitat
Stronghold A accounted for 330 km2 (c. 55%) of the total suitable habitat cover. When unsuitable fragments were removed, the remaining suitable habitat was 283 km2, with three patches > 20 km2 covering 277 km2 (Fig. 1b). Stronghold B encompassed 121 km2 (20% of the total remaining cover), which was reduced to 100 km2 when unsuitable fragments were removed. There was only one patch > 20 km2, covering 78 km2 (Fig. 1c). Stronghold C appeared to be the most degraded, with 152 km2 of suitable habitat (25%), reduced to 93 km2 after unsuitable fragments were removed, and only one large patch, of 23 km2 (Fig. 1d).
Hotspots of forest loss
As of January 2020, the suitable habitat for Gurney's pitta was reduced by 82% compared to the estimated 3,395 km2 of habitat available before expansion of oil palm plantations began in 1999 (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020). Over 80% of the areas where forest was lost during 2017–2020 overlapped with deforestation hotspots. The only habitat patch > 20 km2 in stronghold C is of particular concern as it overlapped entirely with deforestation hotspot areas (Fig. 2b).
Estimating future habitat decline
Because only 5 years of data were available for analysis, there was uncertainty in the prediction of potential sizes of suitable habitat patches, with a wide range of posterior distribution values (Fig. 3). However, 81% of posterior distribution results showed a negative trend, and the median trend (Fig. 3) showed a decrease in forest area. If no conservation action is taken and the rate of decrease continues, no habitat patches > 20 km2 will remain by 2080.
Discussion
Forest loss and degradation are the most urgent threats to the conservation of Gurney's pitta (Bhagwat et al., Reference Bhagwat, Hess, Horning, Khaing, Thein and Aung2017). Forest loss in Myanmar has been largely linked to agricultural expansion and infrastructure development (Lim et al., Reference Lim, Prescott, De Alban, Ziegler and Webb2017). This has particularly affected the lowlands of the Tanintharyi Region in southern Myanmar, where forest cover declined by 80% during 1999–2017 (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020), largely because of the expansion of large-scale oil palm plantations (Saxon & Sheppard, Reference Saxon and Sheppard2014). A moratorium on new plantations (FFI, 2016) was relaxed in 2016 following an order from the regional government. Expansion of small- and large-scale orchards and betel nut plantations have also contributed to forest loss (Shwe et al., Reference Shwe, Sukumal, Grindley and Savini2020), as has road construction. Forest loss recorded during 2017–2020 has exacerbated edge effects and habitat fragmentation, with many patches now too small to guarantee the long-term survival of Gurney's pitta (Fig. 2a,b). Our analysis predicts a nearly complete loss of all lowland forest by 2080.
Strongholds A and B are currently the most viable patches for the species' long-term survival, but are subject to degradation and fragmentation because of ongoing disturbances recorded since January 2020 (Fig. 4). Stronghold C is the most degraded, with only one patch > 20 km2 (Fig. 1c). As this stronghold lies within a deforestation hotspot and is isolated from the other two strongholds, it is questionable whether the Gurney's pitta population there is still viable, although the area receives some protection through community-based assessment and mitigation of threats (including snare removal) because of the presence of the tiger Panthera tigris, a conservation priority species. Strongholds B and C could potentially be expanded by connecting nearby smaller suitable habitat patches (< 20 km2) separated by forested hills up to 250 m altitude on rugged terrain, where the species has been reported sporadically (Donald et al., Reference Donald, Hla, Win, Aung, Moses and Zaw2014; Fig. 4a). Stronghold B could be enlarged by 19 km2 by connecting three small neighbouring patches (Fig. 4b). Similarly, stronghold C could be expanded by 20 km2 and 48 km2 through the addition of two new patches (Fig. 4c,d).
In all three strongholds, road expansion is intensifying the threats to Gurney's pitta (Fig. 2b). Most of the ongoing construction involves upgrading old logging roads as the regional government strives to develop the local economy through increased trans-border trade with Thailand. This could exacerbate existing threats: there have been reports of increased illegal cross-border trade in forest products and sporadic trade in Gurney's pittas for the pet market (Gurney's Pitta Working Group, 2017). Road expansion also facilitates the further incursion of deforestation into Tanintharyi from Thailand (Donald et al., Reference Donald, Round, Aung, Grindley, Steinmetz and Shwe2015).
Loss of suitable habitat, facilitated by lack of enforcement and appropriate protection, was the principal cause of the functional extinction of Gurney's pitta in Thailand. After the rediscovery of the species in 1986 (Round & Treesucon, Reference Round and Treesucon1986), protected areas were established with the aim to preserve what was at that time the only known population. However, the economically valuable flat lowland forest that the species requires were systematically excluded from these protected areas (Round, Reference Round2014). The situation in southern Myanmar is similar, and several attempts to secure legal protection for the remaining lowland forest have been unsuccessful. The proposed Lenya National Park, including Lenya Reserve Forest and Lenya Reserve Forest Extension, would have covered most of the remaining strongholds (Donald et al., Reference Donald, Round, Aung, Grindley, Steinmetz and Shwe2015). However, in June 2019 the proposal, first suggested in October 2004, was dropped because of problems in conducting reliable land and boundary surveys, and an uncertain political situation. The implementation of protection strategies such as patrolling is hampered by the emerging threat of landmines. The first recorded incident involving an exploding landmine, by which a villager was injured, occurred in April 2020 (site 8, Fig. 4); it is unknown who placed the mine(s) and for what purpose.
A new opportunity for protecting lowland forest has arisen in 2019 under the Conservation of Biodiversity and Protected Areas Law, amended in May 2019, with the approval of proposals by local communities to implement Community Conserved Areas or Indigenous Community Conserved Areas. Both designations facilitate a role for Indigenous communities in establishing and managing newly formed protected areas, supporting a bottom-up approach rather than a top-down system. This permits the recruitment of park wardens (or park chiefs) from local communities, who will lease the area for 30 years from the Myanmar Forest Department. This approach would not only allow local communities to manage protected areas following traditional, sustainable practices but, by sharing decision-making power in resource management, would also prevent some of the problems that caused the rejection of the proposal to establish Lenya National Park. Stakeholders are advocating for detailed provisions describing how such Conserved Areas could be implemented and explicitly codified within Myanmar's Land Law reform process. Fauna and Flora International (FFI) Myanmar has been working with forest dwellers and hunters to offer alternative livelihood opportunities such as motorbike repair and tailoring.
Data to estimate the current status of Gurney's pitta populations will be provided by ongoing surveys that are carried out by FFI, Myeik University and members of village conservation groups. These surveys focus on a variety of wildlife and will continue until the end of 2021. In addition to providing a reliable Gurney's pitta population status estimate in each stronghold, the surveys will document new land clearing and encroachment of small-scale farms. In collaboration with FFI, communities are actively participating in campaigns to remove snares and driftnets used to catch terrestrial wildlife, which is raising community interest in biodiversity conservation. Such activities should be expanded as the Forest Department lacks sufficient staffing and budget to adequately patrol Gurney's pitta strongholds. To conserve the remaining habitat and threatened species such as Gurney's pitta, more collaboration among communities, civil society, and government institutions needs to be fostered.
In the longer term, attempts need to be made to establish the proposed Lenya National Park. This will require close collaboration with the regional government, to help resolve the management conflict between the Forest Department and local communities. Gurney's pitta could also be adopted as a flagship species, designated as the Tanintharyi regional bird, and used to promote ecotourism opportunities.
Acknowledgements
We thank Matthew Granger for help with the analysis of the long-term decline of suitable habitat; Maliwan Namkhan for assistance with the update of the 2020 forest cover map; Parinya Padungtin for providing information on locations of forest loss in stronghold A; Matthew Grainger, Philip D. Round and two anonymous reviewers for their critiques; and Oscar Nnaemeka and Greg Irving with language editing. This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, or commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Author contributions
Study design, data collection and analysis, writing: all authors.
Conflicts of interest
None.
Ethical standards
This research abided by the Oryx guidelines on ethical standards and did not involve human subjects, experimentation with animals and/or collection of specimens.