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Species diversity increases information flow about predation in bird communities

Kumar, A.; Wu, J.; Ding, P.; Bro-Jorgensen, J.; Dutour, M.; E. Martinez, A.; Si, X.; Zhang, Q.; Goodale, E.

2026-05-11 ecology
10.64898/2026.05.05.722896 bioRxiv
Show abstract

The Biodiversity-Ecosystem Functioning (BEF) literature has shown species diversity to be essential for ecosystem functioning and services. Yet although acquiring information through interspecific networks can impact ecosystem functioning, it is unclear how it is modulated by species diversity. Eliciting vocal responses using predator models across a latitudinal gradient, we first show that the species diversity of birds increases public information about predation both in the low-cost system of mobbing and in the higher-cost system of alarm calls. A similar result was also found across a fragment area gradient for mobbing; this system was then used to test how species diversity affects interspecific information flow in mobbing communities. We set up two BEF playback experiments, manipulating the species richness level of the playback sound files by varying the number of species producing mobbing calls (one, two, four, eight species). In an experiment in which the call rate across treatments was held constant, and only heterospecific responses were counted, increasing species richness of the sound files increased the number of species and individuals responding, the number of calls produced and their frequency range, and decreased latency to call. An experiment in which call rate increased with the addition of species in each treatment showed a similar, but stronger pattern. There was little evidence that the signals of one particular species changed responses. This supports the hypothesis that the species diversity of a community is a key component influencing the quantity and quality of information flow inside it.

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