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Featured researches published by Rui-Chang Quan.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Bird fruit preferences match the frequency of fruit colours in tropical Asia

Qiong Duan; Eben Goodale; Rui-Chang Quan

While many factors explain the colour of fleshy fruits, it is thought that black and red fruits are common in part because frugivorous birds prefer these colours. We examined this still controversial hypothesis at a tropical Asian field site, using artificial fruits, fresh fruits, four wild-caught resident frugivorous bird species, and hand-raised naïve birds from three of the same species. We demonstrate that all birds favored red artificial fruits more than yellow, blue, black and green, although the artificial black colour was found subsequently to be similar to the artificial blue colour in its spectral reflectance. Wild-caught birds preferred both black and red fleshy natural fruits, whereas hand-raised naïve birds preferred black to red natural fleshy fruits and to those of other colours. All birds avoided artificial and naturally ripe green fruits. The inter-individual variation in colour choice was low and the preferences were constant over time, supporting the hypothesis that bird colour preferences are a contributing factor driving fruit colour evolution in tropical Asia.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Effects of forests, roads and mistletoe on bird diversity in monoculture rubber plantations.

Rachakonda Sreekar; Guohualing Huang; Mika Yasuda; Rui-Chang Quan; Eben Goodale; Richard T. Corlett; Kyle W. Tomlinson

Rising global demand for natural rubber is expanding monoculture rubber (Hevea brasilensis) at the expense of natural forests in the Old World tropics. Conversion of forests into rubber plantations has a devastating impact on biodiversity and we have yet to identify management strategies that can mitigate this. We determined the life-history traits that best predict bird species occurrence in rubber plantations in SW China and investigated the effects of surrounding forest cover and distance to roads on bird diversity. Mistletoes provide nectar and fruit resources in rubber so we examined mistletoe densities and the relationship with forest cover and rubber tree diameter. In rubber plantations, we recorded less than half of all bird species extant in the surrounding area. Birds with wider habitat breadths and low conservation value had a higher probability of occurrence. Species richness and diversity increased logarithmically with surrounding forest cover, but roads had little effect. Mistletoe density increased exponentially with rubber tree diameters, but was unrelated to forest cover. To maximize bird diversity in rubber-dominated landscapes it is therefore necessary to preserve as much forest as possible, construct roads through plantations and not forest, and retain some large rubber trees with mistletoes during crop rotations.


Environmental Pollution | 2017

Mercury flow through an Asian rice-based food web.

Kasun S. Abeysinghe; Guangle Qiu; Eben Goodale; Christopher Anderson; Kevin Bishop; David C. Evers; Morgan W. Goodale; Holger Hintelmann; Shengjie Liu; Christos Mammides; Rui-Chang Quan; Jin Wang; Pianpian Wu; Xiaohang Xu; Xiao-Dong Yang; Xinbin Feng

Mercury (Hg) is a globally-distributed pollutant, toxic to humans and animals. Emissions are particularly high in Asia, and the source of exposure for humans there may also be different from other regions, including rice as well as fish consumption, particularly in contaminated areas. Yet the threats Asian wildlife face in rice-based ecosystems are as yet unclear. We sought to understand how Hg flows through rice-based food webs in historic mining and non-mining regions of Guizhou, China. We measured total Hg (THg) and methylmercury (MeHg) in soil, rice, 38 animal species (27 for MeHg) spanning multiple trophic levels, and examined the relationship between stable isotopes and Hg concentrations. Our results confirm biomagnification of THg/MeHg, with a high trophic magnification slope. Invertivorous songbirds had concentrations of THg in their feathers that were 15x and 3x the concentration reported to significantly impair reproduction, at mining and non-mining sites, respectively. High concentrations in specialist rice consumers and in granivorous birds, the later as high as in piscivorous birds, suggest rice is a primary source of exposure. Spiders had the highest THg concentrations among invertebrates and may represent a vector through which Hg is passed to vertebrates, especially songbirds. Our findings suggest there could be significant population level health effects and consequent biodiversity loss in sensitive ecosystems, like agricultural wetlands, across Asia, and invertivorous songbirds would be good subjects for further studies investigating this possibility.


Ecology and Society | 2017

The pleasure of pursuit: recreational hunters in rural Southwest China exhibit low exit rates in response to declining catch

Charlotte H. Chang; Michele L. Barnes; Margaret Frye; Mingxia Zhang; Rui-Chang Quan; Leah M.G. Reisman; Simon A. Levin; David S. Wilcove

Hunting is one of the greatest threats to tropical vertebrates. Examining why people hunt is crucial to identifying policy levers to prevent excessive hunting. Overhunting is particularly relevant in Southeast Asia, where a high proportion of mammals and birds are globally threatened. We interviewed hunters in Southwest China to examine their social behavior, motivations, and responses to changes in wildlife abundance. Respondents viewed hunting as a form of recreation, not as an economic livelihood, and reported that they would not stop hunting in response to marked declines in expected catch. Even in scenarios where the expected catch was limited to minimal quantities of small, low-price songbirds, up to 36.7% of respondents said they would still continue to hunt. Recreational hunting may be a prominent driver for continued hunting in increasingly defaunated landscapes; this motivation for hunting and its implications for the ecological consequences of hunting have been understudied relative to subsistence and profit hunting. The combination of a preference for larger over smaller game, reluctance to quit hunting, and weak enforcement of laws may lead to hunting-down-the-web outcomes in Southwest China.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017

Total mercury and methylmercury concentrations over a gradient of contamination in earthworms living in rice paddy soil

Kasun S. Abeysinghe; Xiao-Dong Yang; Eben Goodale; Christopher Anderson; Kevin Bishop; Axiang Cao; Xinbin Feng; Shengjie Liu; Christos Mammides; Bo Meng; Rui-Chang Quan; Jing Sun; Guangle Qiu

Mercury (Hg) deposited from emissions or from local contamination, can have serious health effects on humans and wildlife. Traditionally, Hg has been seen as a threat to aquatic wildlife, because of its conversion in suboxic conditions into bioavailable methylmercury (MeHg), but it can also threaten contaminated terrestrial ecosystems. In Asia, rice paddies in particular may be sensitive ecosystems. Earthworms are soil-dwelling organisms that have been used as indicators of Hg bioavailability; however, the MeHg concentrations they accumulate in rice paddy environments are not well known. Earthworm and soil samples were collected from rice paddies at progressive distances from abandoned mercury mines in Guizhou, China, and at control sites without a history of Hg mining. Total Hg (THg) and MeHg concentrations declined in soil and earthworms as distance increased from the mines, but the percentage of THg that was MeHg, and the bioaccumulation factors in earthworms, increased over this gradient. This escalation in methylation and the incursion of MeHg into earthworms may be influenced by more acidic soil conditions and higher organic content further from the mines. In areas where the source of Hg is deposition, especially in water-logged and acidic rice paddy soil, earthworms may biomagnify MeHg more than was previously reported. It is emphasized that rice paddy environments affected by acidifying deposition may be widely dispersed throughout Asia. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:1202-1210.


Zoological Research | 2017

缅北鸟类多样性及保护对策建议@@@Bird diversity in northern Myanmar and conservation implications

张明霞; Myint Kyaw; 李国刚; 赵江波; 曾祥乐; Kyaw Swa; 权锐昌; Ming-Xia Zhang; Guo-Gang Li; Jiang-Bo Zhao; Xiang-Le Zeng; Rui-Chang Quan

We conducted four bird biodiversity surveys in the Putao area of northern Myanmar from 2015 to 2017. Combined with anecdotal information collected between 2012 and 2015, we recorded 319 bird species, including two species (Arborophila mandellii and Lanius sphenocercus) previously unrecorded in Myanmar. Bulbuls (Pycnonotidae), babblers (Timaliidae), pigeons and doves (Columbidae), and pheasants and partridges (Phasianidae) were the most abundant groups of birds recorded. Species richness below 1 500 m a. s. l. was higher than species richness at higher elevations. Our results suggest that the current protected areas in this region should be expanded to lower elevations to cover critical conservation gaps.


Diversity and Distributions | 2015

The use of species-area relationships to partition the effects of hunting and deforestation on bird extirpations in a fragmented landscape

Rachakonda Sreekar; Guohualing Huang; Jiang-Bo Zhao; Bonifacio O. Pasion; Mika Yasuda; Kai Zhang; Indika Peabotuwage; Ximin Wang; Rui-Chang Quan; J. W. Ferry Slik; Richard T. Corlett; Eben Goodale; Rhett D. Harrison


Biological Conservation | 2013

Bird conservation in extremely small tropical rainforest patches in southwest China

Xue Chang; Rui-Chang Quan; Lin Wang


Frontiers in Zoology | 2015

The relationship between defecation and feeding in nestling birds: observational and experimental evidence

Rui-Chang Quan; Huan Li; Bo Wang; Eben Goodale


Biological Conservation | 2017

Natural forest at landscape scale is most important for bird conservation in rubber plantation

Mingxia Zhang; Charlotte H. Chang; Rui-Chang Quan

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Rachakonda Sreekar

Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden

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Mika Yasuda

BirdLife International

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Christos Mammides

Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden

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J. W. Ferry Slik

Universiti Brunei Darussalam

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Guohualing Huang

Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden

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Kyle W. Tomlinson

Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden

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Richard T. Corlett

Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden

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Guangle Qiu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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