Introduction
The Black-capped Vireo Vireo atricapilla is considered an endangered species in the United States (USFWS 1991) and Mexico (DOF 2002) because of its small population size and the relatively small area suitable for breeding (Grzybowski Reference Grzybowski, Poole and Gill1995). Currently, the species is undergoing a five-year status review (USFR 2005); a first formal evaluation provided current information on the species’s distribution, population trends, and threats (USFWS 2007). Breeding habitat extends from central Oklahoma in the north through the Edward’s Plateau and Big Bend National Park in Texas, to central Coahuila in Mexico. The primary threats for the species in the U.S. breeding area consist of habitat loss from development, exotic cattle grazing, and nest parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds Molothrus ater (Wilkins et al. Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006). The winter distribution, however, is not as well-documented. In their review of the status and distribution of this species, Wilkins et al. (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) wrote, “The known non-breeding, winter range consists of an elongated and patchily distributed area along the Pacific slopes of the Sierra Madre Occidental Mountains in Mexico, extending from southern Sonora to Oaxaca”.
Because events occurring during the non-breeding season play a critical role in the annual dynamics of migratory species (Rappole Reference Rappole1995, Marra and Holmes Reference Marra and Holmes2001), knowledge of winter habitat requirements is a high priority in the Black-capped Vireo Recovery Plan, and it is a prerequisite to further recovery efforts in Mexico (USFWS 1991). In fact, one of the recovery criteria consists of knowing if there is sufficient and sustainable habitat in the winter range to support the breeding populations (USFWS 1991).
In this study we apply an ecological niche/species distribution modelling approach (e.g. Guisan and Zimmermann Reference Guisan and Zimmermann2000, Guisan and Thuiller Reference Guisan and Thuiller2005, Elith et al. Reference Elith, Graham, Anderson, Dudík, Ferrier, Guisan, Hijmans, Huettmann, Leathwick, Lehmann, Li, Lohmann, Loiselle, Manion, Moritz, Nakamura, Nakazawa, Overton, Peterson, Phillips, Richardson, Scachetti-Pereira, Schapire, Soberón, Williams, Wisz and Zimmermann2006) to predict the potential non-breeding distribution of the Black-capped Vireo. These techniques are being increasingly used in threatened species conservation to identify potential distributions and focus conservation action (e.g. Donald et al. Reference Donald, Buchanan and Collar2010). Our goal was to generate a model of the species' distribution that could be used for further research and conservation efforts directed at this species.
Methods
Study area
The study area was defined by those ecoregions with documented occurrence of Black-capped Vireo. We used this approach because ecoregions are characterised by geographically distinct assemblages of natural communities, sharing similar environmental conditions and having a large majority of species critically interacting for their long-term persistence (Olson et al. Reference Olson, Dinerstein, Wikramanayake, Burgess, Powell, Underwood, D’Amico, Itoua, Strand, Morrison, Loucks, Allnutt, Ricketts, Kura, Lamoreux, Wettengel, Hedao and Kassem2001). Dry forest and subtropical thorn forest are or were the original ecosystems in 48% of the study area, while ecoregions with temperate vegetation formations (e.g. pine and pine-oak forests) represent 44%.
Field occurrence data
As part of a larger project on the current distribution of endemic birds in the Pacific lowlands of Mexico, we visited several dry forest locations in the states of Jalisco, Colima, Michoacan, Guerrero, and Oaxaca. We concentrated our field work during the months of May–September to cover the breeding season of resident birds; however, some sites were visited during December when Neotropical migrants are already settled on winter territories (Rappole Reference Rappole1995). At each locality we conducted 8–12 point counts (presence/absence) following standard protocols (Hutto et al. Reference Hutto, Pletschet and Hendricks1986).
Generating distribution models
Wintering distribution models for the Black-capped Vireo were generated by applying three different presence-only prediction software programs: Biomapper (Ecological Niche Factor Analysis; Hirzel et al. Reference Hirzel, Hausser, Chessel and Perrin2002), Maxent (Maximum Entropy; Phillips et al. Reference Phillips, Anderson and Schapire2006), and GARP (Genetic Algorithm for Rule-setting Prediction; Stockwell and Peters Reference Stockwell and Peters1999). We used three predictive approaches because Biomapper and Maxent provide explicit analyses of species’ ecological niches, and because of GARP’s wide use for modelling bird species. Our approach consisted of generating and evaluating different models from which to select a final model with maximum accuracy.
Modelling approach implementation
GARP was applied following the best model selection approach which minimises omission and commission errors (Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Lew and Peterson2003): 10 best binary models were summed and then, applying a conservative approach and previous modelling experiences (e.g. Ortega-Huerta and Peterson Reference Ortega-Huerta and Peterson2004), only the pixels with the highest agreement values (9 and 10) were taken as the predicted presence of the species. Considering the tendency of Maxent to over-fit (Phillips et al. Reference Phillips, Anderson and Schapire2006, Dudik et al. Reference Dudik, Phillips and Schapire2007, Peterson et al. Reference Peterson, Papes and Eaton2007, Phillips and Dudik Reference Phillips and Dudik2008), we used a regularisation multiplier of three, while applying the 10 percentile training presence for defining a prediction threshold (value = 17) so that we reduced the risk of underestimating the areas included by the species ecological niche model (a maximum of 10% of occurrences would wrongfully be predicted; e.g. Pearson et al. Reference Pearson, Raxworthy, Nakamura and Peterson2007). Finally, Biomapper’s habitat suitability model was obtained by using the median algorithm. Five factors explained 95% of information. The k-fold cross-tabulation which is an evaluation method suitable for models generated from small datasets (Hirzel et al. Reference Hirzel, Le Lay, Helfer, Randin and Guisan2006) helped to define a prediction threshold (value = 51). Other parameters applied when running such software are shown in Appendix S1 in the online Supplementary Materials.
Model training data
Data on the occurrence of Black-capped Vireo were obtained from natural history museum databases, literature reviews and field surveys. A total of 29 locations spanning the period 1947–2006 were used to predict the potential distribution: 18 records from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility database (GBIF; htpp://www.gbif.net), six records from the literature, and five records from our field survey. The data from GBIF were from the following sources: Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 12 records; Museum of Vertebrate Zoology (UC Berkeley), 1 record; Instituto de Biologia, UNAM, 1 record; Natural History Museum University of Kansas, 1 record; Louisiana State University Museum of Natural Science, 1 record; University of Washington Burke Museum, 1 record; Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History, 1 record. Although 56 additional observations by Wilkins et al. (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) are an important contribution to our knowledge of the current distribution of Black-capped Vireo, we could not use them because of their lack of a geographical location. Moreover, a great percentage of museum records are from the same or nearby localities, which prevents us from using them as independent records for modelling purposes.
Environmental prediction variables
We used seven climatic variables: mean diurnal temperature range, isothermality (mean diurnal range/ annual temperature range), annual precipitation, precipitation of driest month, precipitation seasonality, precipitation of warmest quarter, and precipitation of coldest quarter (Hijmans et al. Reference Hijmans, Cameron, Parra, Jones and Jarvis2005) and four topographical variables: aspect, elevation, slope and topographic index (referred to as wetness index because it is a function of the upstream contributing area and the slope of landscape; Moore et al. Reference Moore, Grayson and Ladson1991) (USGS 2005) as environmental prediction variables. We first generated distribution models based only on abiotic factors, such as climatic and topographic variables, and then restricted these models by eliminating areas covered by agriculture, improved grassland, and urban development which are known to be unsuitable habitats for the species. We used a high resolution up-to-date land use/land cover digital map provided by INEGI (2005).
Model evaluation/selection
Models generated by the three approaches were evaluated through an accuracy assessment which consisted of calculating the Kappa Index (Congalton and Green Reference Congalton and Green1999, Jenness and Wynne Reference Jenness and Wynne2004). Indeed, accuracy maximisation was the criterion applied for selecting a potential distribution model among the outputs obtained by the three modelling approaches. Species occurrence data used for model evaluation/selection consisted of field data provided by Hollon and Sarkar (Reference Hollon and Sarkar2009). These data included 15 independent presence sites, corresponding to dates from February 2002 to February 2004. Pseudo-absence data were obtained by generating 15 random sites within areas modelled as species absence by comparing approaches; GARP absence areas were used to generate random sites to evaluate both Maxent and Biomapper models, and conversely, Maxent absence areas were used to generate random sites to evaluate the GARP model.
Results
We include in this report five unpublished field records by the authors. These records are summarised in Table 1 and the localities and vegetation are described in Appendix S2 in the online Supplementary Materials.
Geo-referenced records from the literature
Schaldach (Reference Schaldach1963: 75) observed two individuals in Colima (February 1958 “north slope of the Media Luna” (103°58′11.9″W, 19°13′48″N; 568 m a.s.l.; Davis (Reference Davis1960) reported one individual 15.5 km north-west of Manzanillo, Colima (104°24′49″W, 19°08′22.3″N; 138 m a.s.l.); Hutto (Reference Hutto1994) reported two individuals in the lowlands of Jalisco on December 1984 at Estación de Biología Chamela (105°02′44.7″W, 19°30′4.8″N; 33 m a.s.l.); Binford (Reference Binford1989: 220) cited the Sierras de Mihuatlán and Yucuyacua in the state of Oaxaca as the south-easternmost locations of the vireo’s winter range. He observed an individual (11 February 1974) at 914 m a.s.l. on a road 9.6 km north of Putla de Guerrero (97°59′12.4″W, 17°03′16.4″N). Two females were collected on 8 and 11 December 1963, just north of San Gabriel Mixtepec (97°04′27.4″W, 16°03′22.7″N; 731 m a.s.l.) (Phillips Reference Phillips1966, cited in Binford Reference Binford1989).
Predicted potential wintering range
According to our three models, potential wintering distribution consists of areas of about 115,590 km2 (Biomapper), 126,346 km2 (Maxent), and 141,390 km2 (GARP) (Figure 1). Each of these models represented a c. 30% reduction in area after masking out agriculture, urban areas, and improved grassland—land use/land cover types known to be unsuitable for the species. The intersection of the three binary models (presence/absence) resulted in a spatial correspondence of 83% (64% absence and 19% presence), while spatial disagreement in predicted presence consisted of 5% of the total area predicted exclusively by GARP, 3% by Biomapper and 2% by Maxent. Highest percentage of spatial agreement between pairs of models corresponded to GARP and Maxent with 91% (67% absence and 24% presence). Results of the accuracy assessment showed that GARP and Maxent models had the highest Kappa values (0.86 and 0.80, respectively; see Table 2), with non-significant differences between both models (Z = 0.47; P = 0.32). Based on these results, the GARP model was selected to identify areas considered as potential wintering range of Black-capped Vireo in Mexico.
The predicted winter distribution extends along the Pacific coast; its most northern limit is located in southern Sonora (Río Yaqui, Alvaro Obregón Dam), while the most southern areas are located in the state of Oaxaca (Salina Cruz on the Pacific coast and Matias Romero inland). Distribution patterns of the species are described in the first instance by ecoregions. However, to provide a more detailed description of predicted presence and absence boundaries we used physiographic regions (Cervantes-Zamora et al. Reference Cervantes-Zamora, Cornejo-Olguín, Lucero-Márquez, Espinoza-Rodríguez, Miranda-Viquez and Pineda-Velázquez1990) which included the selected ecoregions (Figure 2):
a) Sinaloa Dry Forest especially restricted to Pie de la Sierra physiographic region.
b) Jalisco Dry Forest with the exception of Volcanoes de Colima southern slope and eastern slope of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt Pine-oak forests.
c) Southern Pacific Dry Forest with exception of Sierras and Valles de Oaxaca.
d) Balsas Dry Forest especially its southern slopes neighbouring the Southern Pacific Dry Forests and the Sierra Madre del Sur Pine-oak Forests, and its northern areas next to the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt Pine-oak Forests, with the exception of its eastern and northern areas.
e) Low elevation areas within the Sierra Madre del Sur Pine-oak Forests.
Other areas of potential wintering range are less extensive in regions such as Llanura Costera de Mazatlán, Delta del Río Grande Santiago, southern Sierras y Valles Zacatecanos, Gran Meseta y Cañones Duranguenses eastern slope, northern Sierra de Jalisco, southern Sierras Orientales (Oaxaca), and Sur de Puebla. There are also physiographic regions with different climatic regimes that did not contain predicted habitat for the species, such as the Llanura Costera y Deltas de Sonora y Sinaloa in the arid realm; Altos de Jalisco, Chapala, Neovolcánica Tarasca and Volcanes de Colima in the temperate zone; and the Depresión del Tepalcatepec, Sierras Centrales de Oaxaca, Mixteca Alta, and Sierras y Valles de Oaxaca in the tropical semi-humid climatic zone.
For the most part, the predicted range closely follows the dry forest boundary and clearly avoids areas with the highest elevations within temperate ecoregions such as the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt Pine-oak Forests (Figure 2). However, the model also appears to avoid the lowest areas of the Balsas Dry Forest ecoregion. Less than half (35%) of the predicted area is located at elevations of 0–500 m, while 83% occurs < 1,250 m and 17% > 1,250 m. Vegetation types within the predicted range consist of 33% temperate forests (cloud forest, pine, pine-oak and oak forests), 64% tropical deciduous and semi-deciduous forests, < 2% tropical evergreen and semi-evergreen forests, < 1% gallery forest and mangrove, and < 1% desert scrub.
Both Maxent and Biomapper identified elevation and seasonality of precipitation as the most useful of the 11 variables used in generating the distribution models. The environmental variables predicting the largest areas of the Black-capped Vireo’s wintering range are shown in Table 3. These can be summarised as: areas at lower elevations and with lower values of mean diurnal temperature range, compared to values for the whole study area. On the other hand, both seasonality of precipitation and precipitation during the warmest part of the year had much higher values for the predicted range than average conditions for the whole region.
Potential winter habitat and protected areas
By the year 2002, there were only a few protected areas located within the Black-capped Vireo’s predicted wintering range (CONANP 2002, CONANP 2005, Figure 3a): four biosphere reserves (Chamela-Cuixmala in Jalisco, Sierra de Manantlán in Jalisco and Colima, Sierra de Huautla in Morelos, Puebla and Guerrero, and Tehuacán-Cuicatlán in Puebla and Oaxaca), three national parks (El Veladero in Guerrero, Huatulco in Oaxaca, and Lagunas de Chacahua in Oaxaca) and two wildlife protection areas (Sierra de Alamos-Río Cuchujaqui in Sonora and Meseta de Cacaxtla in Sinaloa) covering a total of 2,229 km2 or 1.6% of the predicted winter distribution of the species. Recently, large watersheds distributed across Mexico’s western slope were listed as natural protected areas by the Mexican government (CONANP 2009), and therefore the area within the vireo’s predicted winter distribution that is protected increased to 7.1% (Table 4 and Figure 3b).
Finally, it is important to mention that nine Important Bird Areas (IBA) which amount to 14,924 km2 (Arizmendi and Márquez 2000) are also included within the vireo’s predicted wintering range. These are: Coalcomán-Pomaro (2,500 km2), Tumbiscatio (1,565 km2) and Cuenca Baja del Balsas (1,130 km2) in the state of Michoacán; Sierra de Atoyac (929 km2), Vallecitos de Zaragoza (477 km2) and Acahuizotla-Agua del Obispo (419 km2) in the state of Guerrero; Sierra de Miahuatlán (746 km2) in Oaxaca; Marismas Nacionales, (1,160 km2) in Nayarit-Sinaloa; and San Juan de Camarones (1,291 km2), Durango (Figure 3c).
Discussion
Historical and predicted distribution
The predicted winter distribution of the Black-capped Vireo, based on current observations (this study) and historical records, includes the states of Sinaloa, Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima, Michoacan, Guerrero and Oaxaca (Figure 2). These states have all been previously recorded as lying within the vireo’s winter range (Miller et al. Reference Miller, Friedmann, Griscom and Moore1957: 220), although this source also reported birds from Durango (west of Sierra Madre) and the state of Mexico (Toluca volcano, as a regular winter resident). More recent records are those of Schaldach (Reference Schaldach1963) who observed two birds during his surveys in Colima and Jalisco. Hutto (Reference Hutto, Hagan and Johnston1992) reported one observation during his intensive survey throughout western Mexico from Sinaloa to Chiapas. Villaseñor and Hutto (Reference Villaseñor, Hutto, Wilson and Sader1995) observed one individual during their work in Jalisco, Colima, and Michoacan. Binford (Reference Binford1989) regarded the species as a rare winter resident in the Pacific region of Oaxaca. He cited records by Phillips (Reference Phillips1966) in the Sierras de Mihuatlán and Yucuyacua in the state of Oaxaca as the south-easternmost locations in the vireo’s winter range. We found it 40 km to the south of Phillips’s (Reference Phillips1966) records, in Arenoso Creek, Huatulco. To our knowledge, there are no winter records from south of this point. On the other hand, González-Medina et al. (Reference González-Medina, Angulo-Gastélum, Castillo-Guerrero and Guevara-Medina2009) reported 15 new records from Sinaloa, where the species was not detected in the northern portions of the state.
Interestingly, at the Estacion de Biología Chamela, Jalisco, this vireo has been recorded four times. Hutto (Reference Hutto1994) observed two individuals during his field work at the station from mid-November to mid-December 1984. Another individual was previously captured in the same area on 26 September of 1980 (IBUNAM # P006005), and we captured one individual on 22 March 2001. However, we cannot conclude that this species is common in the area. Intensive mist-netting and bird observations (point-counts) at the station during the temperate winter months (September–May) from 1999 to 2001, and 2005–2008, resulted in only one bird captured (J. Vega Rivera unpubl. data).
In the most recent review, Wilkins et al. (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) recognised that the winter range of the Black-capped Vireo had not been well documented. Based on previous reports, they delineated the wintering range along the Pacific slopes of the Sierra Madre Occidental Mountains in Mexico, extending from southern Sonora to Oaxaca, but concluded that most recent records (R. Powell unpubl. data) indicated that this vireo may be most heavily distributed in the states of Sinaloa (15 specimen records), Nayarit (13), Jalisco (seven) and Colima (two). González-Medina et al. (Reference González-Medina, Angulo-Gastélum, Castillo-Guerrero and Guevara-Medina2009) reported 15 records from surveys during the winter months of 2004–2006. Previously, Graber (Reference Graber1961) found that most records were concentrated in Sinaloa and Nayarit and described this area as the centre of the wintering grounds. Other reported museum records include Durango (four), Michoacan (one), Guerrero (two), Oaxaca (three), and Mexico (one). More field work is needed to separate low/high occurrence from small/large sample effort, and accidental from expected distribution records.
Winter range
We generated three ecological niche models which showed similar geographic distribution patterns (83% spatial correspondence among the three programs used - GARP, Maxent and Biomapper). Although the winter range proposed by Wilkins et al. (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) was based on known locations since time of listing, a comparison between this study’s distribution models and the former may be useful in revealing important geographical traits. The three models extended the range further to the north (except Biomapper) and to the south, beyond the documented occurrence of the species. In the south, the distribution runs along the southern coast (Costas del Sur province) and southern areas within the eastern sierras (Sierras Orientales province) in the state of Oaxaca.
Wilkins et al.’s (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) winter range consists of a narrow elongated strip running to the south (e.g. southern coast), while our model also includes significant lower elevation areas located within the southern coastal mountains (Cordillera Costera del Sur province). This is especially true in the state of Oaxaca, while across the state of Guerrero, distributional areas belonging to the southern coastal mountains are located both at the transition zone with the southern coast and on this region’s western slope, always avoiding higher elevations.
Wilkins et al.’s (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) winter range widens most significantly in the middle part of Mexico’s western slope, particularly in the states of Jalisco and Colima. However, our proposed distribution model shows that temperate regions included within such a wide distribution zone (Sierra de Jalisco, Chapala and Volcanes de Colima) contain no significant areas predicted as wintering range for the Black-capped Vireo. Finally, Wilkins et al.’s (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) northern elongated range does not include the low elevation canyons and branches of the Sierra Madre shown by our proposed model.
According to updated high-resolution land use/land cover data (INEGI 2005), 99% of the Black-capped Vireo’s predicted winter distribution mainly includes tropical dry forests (64%) and temperate vegetation formations (33%). Gordon and Ornelas (Reference Gordon and Ornelas2000) categorised the Black-capped Vireo as an “apparent habitat generalist” based on different reports on its habitat preferences (Escalante Reference Escalante1988, Binford Reference Binford1989, Howell and Webb Reference Howell and Webb1995, Stotz et al. Reference Stotz, Fitzpatrick, Parker and Moskovits1996). However, according to these authors, the dry forest seemed to be a recurring habitat type associated with the species; “tropical semi-deciduous forest” (Binford Reference Binford1989: 220), “tropical deciduous forest” (Stotz et al. Reference Stotz, Fitzpatrick, Parker and Moskovits1996: 282), “oak brush” and “tropical deciduous forest” (Escalante Reference Escalante1988), and “humid brushy second growth” and “forest edge” (Howell and Webb Reference Howell and Webb1995). Further, Schaldach (Reference Schaldach1963), Davis (Reference Davis1960), Hutto (Reference Hutto1994) and Villaseñor and Hutto (Reference Villaseñor, Hutto, Wilson and Sader1995) associate this vireo with the dry forest, even though they visited other vegetation types. More recently, based on Powell’s unpublished data, Wilkins et al. (Reference Wilkins, Powell, Conkey and Snelgrove2006) said that the Black-capped Vireo selects both mesic secondary growth and xeric scrub, but uses a variety of other habitat types, including shade coffee plantations, thorn forest, riparian forest, pine-oak forest and deciduous forest. In their survey in the State of Sinaloa, González-Medina et al. (Reference González-Medina, Angulo-Gastélum, Castillo-Guerrero and Guevara-Medina2009) argue that the Black-capped Vireo shows a preference for the dry forests. We did find that this vireo can occur in disturbed habitats, but only to the degree that these places are located within a matrix of forested areas.
Based on our own observations, the predicted winter distribution, and analyses of the published information, we suggest that the Black-capped Vireo’s winter habitat is primarily tropical dry forest, but it uses a variety of other habitat types and ecotones which occur and intermix with the tropical dry forest.
Current status of tropical dry forest
In Mexico, tropical dry forest ranges from sea level to 2,000 m (Miranda and Hernandez-X 1963; Rzedowski Reference Rzedowski1978, Trejo Reference Trejo1998). The dry forest (also known as deciduous forest, seasonal dry forest, tropical dry broadleaf forest, selva baja caducifolia, bosque tropical caducifolio) is the dominant vegetation type along the Pacific lowlands of Mexico, where it runs as a corridor from southern Sonora to Chiapas (Trejo and Dirzo Reference Trejo and Dirzo2000). Because this forest system occurs with, and becomes mixed with, fragments of semi-deciduous forest, thorn forest, desert scrub and oak forest at higher elevations, it is difficult to separate and evaluate its current actual extent and condition (Trejo Reference Trejo1998). One of the most recent analyses of the status of dry forest in Mexico is that of Trejo and Dirzo (Reference Trejo and Dirzo2000). These authors concluded that by 1990 at a national level, only 27% of the original area of dry forest (around 14% of the country) remained intact, 27% was altered, 23% degraded, and the remaining 23% had been replaced by other land uses. Furthermore, the semi-deciduous forest which apparently plays an important role in maintaining the biological diversity of the dry forest (Stiles Reference Stiles and Janzen1983), and which seems to be an important habitat for the Black-capped Vireo, is vanishing from the Pacific lowlands. This vegetation has been almost entirely replaced by agricultural fields and cattle-raising. Remnants of this vegetation type are restricted to rough terrain such as canyons and creeks (Lott et al. Reference Lott, Bullock and Solis Magallanes1987). Mexico’s dry forest is considered one of the most threatened among ten tropical and subtropical dry forest ecoregions (Miles et al. Reference Miles, Newton, DeFries, Ravilious, May, Blyth, Kapos and Gordon2006).
Although the dry forest has been recognised as a global priority for protection (Murphy and Lugo Reference Murphy and Lugo1986, Janzen Reference Janzen and Wilson1988, Stotz et al. Reference Stotz, Fitzpatrick, Parker and Moskovits1996, Olson et al. Reference Olson, Dinerstein, Abell, Allnutt, Carpenter, McClenachan, D’Amico, Hurley, Kassem, Strand, Taye and Thieme2000) in Mexico and elsewhere, it has received very little attention in terms of research or conservation action (Noguera et al. Reference Noguera, Vega Rivera, García Aldrete and Quesada Avendano2002). There were recently only nine natural protected areas (NPA) covering about 1.6% of the Black-capped Vireo’s predicted winter distribution. The inclusion in 2009 of additional wild lands to the Natural Protected Areas System increased the area protected to 7.1%. Such an increase results from adding large areas such as the Natural Resources Protection Area “Cuenca Alimentadora del Distrito de Riego 043 Estado de Nayarit” (54% of the total predicted habitat within current NPA) and the Zicuirán-Infiernillo Biosphere Reserve, which together with existing biosphere reserves accounted for 34% of the total predicted habitat within current NPA (see Figure 3a–b). The remaining 12% of predicted habitat under official protection corresponds to areas for Wildlife Protection (7.5%), National Parks (1.6%), Natural Sanctuaries and Community Lands certified for conservation (2.4%) (Figure 3b). The whole set of NPA containing predicted wintering range includes higher proportions of tropical deciduous forests, compared to available habitat; 72% of tropical deciduous and semi-deciduous forests (vs. 64% of total available), and 27% of temperate forests (vs. 33% of total available).
In contrast to the small extent of current protected areas, the identified IBAs cover a total of 14, 924 km2 of predicted range. However, it seems the IBAs have been useful only as an academic exercise; the lack of resources and planning efforts has resulted in the absence of conservation programmes or actions within such areas. In their analysis of Neotropical birds Stotz et al. (Reference Stotz, Fitzpatrick, Parker and Moskovits1996: 51) wrote, “It is dangerous to be a deciduous specialist in the Neotropics”. This conclusion appears to apply to the Black-capped Vireo in the non-breeding season. We believe our results can be used in identifying and evaluating specific key areas for the species during the non-breeding winter season. Our study also highlights the lack of information on the ecology of the Black-capped Vireo during the non-breeding season. Although our data are not conclusive, there is the possibility that this vireo is a participant in mixed-species flocks. Confirmation of this finding is extremely important for understanding the species’s winter ecology, population biology, and conservation prospects.
Supplementary Material
The supplementary materials for this article can be found online at journals.cambridge.org/bci
Acknowledgements
We thank Rocio Guerrero and Andres Garcia for his help in the field. Logistical support (vehicles, equipment and office space) was provided by Estacion de Biología Chamela, Instituto de Biología, UNAM. We thank Simon Gilling, Tomislav Hengl, and two anonymous reviewers for insightful comments that greatly improved the manuscript. Funding for fieldwork was provided by UNAM though the Programa de Apoyo a Proyectos de Investigación e Innovación Tecnológica, (PAPIIT IN218803) to JV and MO.