• Supersized fruit eater database on clima

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tuesday, June 20, 2023 22:30:28
    Supersized fruit eater database on climate change frontline

    Date:
    June 20, 2023
    Source:
    Michigan State University
    Summary:
    To conserve precious and fragile biodiversity hotspots, a crucial
    step is knowing how the fruit eaters are doing. To assist in that,
    scientists and students have supersized a database to keep track
    of such animals and birds.


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    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    To conserve precious and fragile biodiversity hotspots, a crucial step is knowing how the fruit eaters are doing. To assist in that, scientists and students at Michigan State University (MSU) have supersized a database
    to keep track of such animals and birds.

    In this month's open-access journal Global Ecology and Biogeography, the
    group introduces for the first time a hulking list of more than 45,000
    traits for creatures that eat fruit. Frugivoria, named for the species
    called frugivores who survive mainly on fruit, supersizes existing
    databases by providing researchers and conservationists with one-stop
    listings of both critters and birds in the forests of Central and South America. Frugivoria's data and workflow are open and accessible to all
    to help facilitate its use for addressing the biodiversity crisis.

    In a time of rapid climate change, it's crucial to understand how the
    fruit eaters are doing in specific ways.

    "With climate change, seed dispersion is really important," said Beth
    Gerstner, a PhD candidate in the MSU Department of Fisheries and Wildlife
    who led the development. "Fruit eaters maintain forest composition and
    health by pooping - - which spreads seeds. Frugivoria is an important contribution because researchers can use this to understand the diversity
    of their roles in the ecosystem." Knowing what is doing the fruit
    eating and pooping, as well as their distribution and life traits --
    their life expectancies, breeding habits, habitat preferences -- is
    critical to tracking changes that climate change may bring. Yet current databases were fragmented or incomplete.

    Starting in 2018 at MSU, 12 undergraduate students were tasked with
    sleuthing through of mounds of scientific publications to flesh out
    existing records of fruit eaters, adding birds for a more holistic understanding of the forests.

    Most exciting, Gerstner said, was entering 44 new species, like the
    olinguito.

    That's a member of the same family as racoons that lives in the cloud
    forests of the northern Andes, and one that Gerstner studies. The
    olinguito had been mistaken for the larger olingo, but upon being
    discovered in 2013 has been found to indeed be genetically different.

    "Natural history is entering the age of big data," said Phoebe Zarnetske, associate professor in integrative biology and director, Institute for Biodiversity, Ecology, Evolution, and Macrosystems (IBEEM). "Through Frugivoria, we are contributing to increasing the accessibility of natural history information traditionally found in museums and collections. This project provided a unique opportunity to engage numerous undergraduates
    in research with data science and functional ecology.

    Zarnetske said Frugivoria can help with both basic and applied questions
    about species' functions in their environment. It can be used by
    community scientists to learn more about species' natural history, and
    it can aid in species conservation assessments "As a result," she said, "Frugivoria is part of something bigger -- we can leverage the power of
    its big data to help solve the biodiversity crises." Getting Frugivoria
    out where it's needed is Gerstner's goal. "My hope," she said, "is for
    the database to be used by the International Union for the Conservation
    of Nature and people doing on-the-ground conservation." Both Gerstner
    and Zarnetske are members of MSU's Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
    Program and Spatial and Community Ecology (SpaCE) Lab The work behind "Frugivoria: A trait database for birds and mammals exhibiting frugivory
    across contiguous Neotropical moist forests" was supported by a NASA
    Future Investigators in NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology,
    a National Science Foundation Campus Cyberinfrastructure program and computational resources and services provided by the Institute for Cyber-Enabled Research of which co-author Patrick Bills is a member. In addition to the open access paper in Global Ecology and Biogeography,
    the database itself is published open access with the Environmental
    Data Initiative.

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    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Michigan_State_University. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Beth E. Gerstner, Patrick Bills, Phoebe L. Zarnetske. Frugivoria:
    A trait
    database for birds and mammals exhibiting frugivory across
    contiguous Neotropical moist forests. Global Ecology and
    Biogeography, 2023; DOI: 10.1111/geb.13716 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230620113803.htm

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