Published February 27, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Behavioural plasticity is associated with reduced extinction risk in birds

  • 1. Centre for Research on Ecology and Forestry Applications
  • 2. University of Gothenburg
  • 3. McGill University

Description

Behavioural plasticity is believed to reduce species vulnerability to extinction, yet global evidence supporting this hypothesis is lacking. We address this gap by quantifying the extent to which birds are observed behaving in novel ways to obtain food in the wild: based on a unique dataset of >3,800 novel behaviours, we show that species with a higher propensity to innovate are at a lower risk of global extinction and are more likely to have increasing or stable populations than less innovative birds. These results mainly reflect a higher tolerance of innovative species to habitat destruction, the main threat for birds.

Notes

Population trend was unknown for 633 species (coded as "NA" in the TrendCode column).

The R code used to analyse this dataset is also provided.

Files

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md5:b0388b8951d8e6c2686604431a620d44
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