Jessica Hardesty
jessica.hardesty@duke.edu
Graduate Program in Ecology
Duke University
Durham, NC

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My dissertation examined the dynamics of cloud forest bird communities along an altitudinal gradient on the eastern slopes of the Ecuadorian Andes. Specifically, I investigated the seasonality of breeding, compared
diets among groups of hummingbirds, and investigated a novel tool for documenting altitudinal migrations. In Chapter 2, I compared the prevalence of breeding condition in mist-netted birds among elevations and
months. I found a marked increase in breeding birds during Sept-Nov at higher elevations, but little such "breeding season" at lower elevations. I then shifted focus to diet among hummingbirds. I used N15 isotopes to
demonstrate that females and adults feed at higher trophic levels than males and juveniles, respectively. Females captured during breeding season were also feeding at higher trophic levels than those captured
outside of the breeding season, though the sample sizes were quite small (Chapter 3).

I also examined a novel methodology for tracing annual altitudinal migrations, which takes advantage of the natural variation in deuterium abundance from the base to the peaks of the Andes (Chapter 4). Local
migrations by birds in the tropics pose conservation problems, in part because the movements themselves are difficult to document. There is a theoretical relationship between Deuterium (or O18) signature and
elevation, because of fractionation during precipitation events and evapotranspiration. A previous study had suggested that if a bird had more or less deuterium in its tissues than theory would suggest, such
discrepancy might be used to identify altitudinal migrants. Unfortunately, when I refined their methodology, I found that the variation within species and sites was too great to allow such applications.

In addition, during my field research I worked closely with the park guards and communities along this altitudinal transect. I investigated the changes brought by a new road bisecting the World Heritage Site with formal
survey methodologies. I also trained birds guides and park guards, and found funding to ensure their having the basic equipment needed for backcountry guiding.