Publications by authors named "Rohit Naniwadekar"

Greater diversity of habitats on islands is often correlated with higher species richness (including endemic and threatened taxa), implying the need to understand species-habitat associations. Such habitat associations could also point toward the role of abiotic filtering and competition in structuring species communities, necessitating the examination of the role of species traits and phylogenetic relationships in intra-island community organization, an aspect poorly examined in the literature. We investigated the composition and structuring of forest bird communities in closely co-occurring evergreen and deciduous forests within South Andaman Island (Indian Ocean), wherein the importance of deciduous forests for birds is undervalued.

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With agricultural demands increasing globally, determining the nature of impacts of different forms of agriculture on biodiversity, especially for threatened vertebrates and habitats, is critical to inform land management. This is especially true for open ecosystems such as the natural rock outcrops and amphibians, both of which are threatened by land-use change. Lateritic plateaus of the northern Western Ghats are rock outcrop ecosystems harboring endemic biodiversity.

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Article Synopsis
  • The research focuses on mathematical models to understand the movement of two species of Asian hornbills in environments with varying resources, influenced by their proximity to factors like nesting sites and human settlements.
  • Utilizing telemetry data, the study identifies movement patterns through the Fokker-Planck equation and highlights that breeding hornbills have larger diffusion coefficients due to frequent direction changes to return to nests.
  • The findings suggest that the ratio of drift to diffusion coefficients can indicate an individual hornbill's breeding status and could be used to characterize different species, with increased search times near human activity.
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Endozoochory, a mutualistic interaction between plants and frugivores, is one of the key processes responsible for maintenance of tropical biodiversity. Islands, which have a smaller subset of plants and frugivores when compared with mainland communities, offer an interesting setting to understand the organization of plant-frugivore communities vis-a-vis the mainland sites. We examined the relative influence of functional traits and phylogenetic relationships on the plant-seed disperser interactions on an island and a mainland site.

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While large avian frugivores are known to be key dispersers for large-seeded tree species, their role in community-wide plant-disperser networks is still poorly known. Large avian frugivores are also among the most threatened due to anthropogenic impacts. We evaluated the role of large avian frugivores in a plant-disperser community by (a) determining whether the plant-disperser community was modular, with a distinct community of large frugivores (thereby highlighting their importance), (b) determining relative qualitative and quantitative roles played by large-bodied frugivores vis-à-vis other frugivores and (c) determining impacts of large-bodied frugivore loss on the plant-disperser community.

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Logging and hunting are two key direct threats to the survival of wildlife in the tropics, and also disrupt important ecosystem processes. We investigated the impacts of these two factors on the different stages of the seed dispersal cycle, including abundance of plants and their dispersers and dispersal of seeds and recruitment, in a tropical forest in north-east India. We focused on hornbills, which are important seed dispersers in these forests, and their food tree species.

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