Introduction
There has been a long tradition of keeping caged songbirds in Indonesia and other parts of Southeast Asia (e.g. Jepson and Ladle Reference Jepson and Ladle2005, Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Collar, Lees, Moss, Yuda and Marsden2020). Recent surveys of ownership across Java, the island at the centre of the songbird trade indicate that around 12 million households across Java keep around 70 million birds, including many wild-caught species, and that ownership levels have increased over the past decade (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Collar, Lees, Moss, Yuda and Marsden2020). This has led to acute concerns for the sustainability of this largely domestic trade, the so-called ‘Asian Songbird Crisis’ affecting wild bird populations in the region (Eaton et al. Reference Eaton, Shepherd, Rheindt, Harris, van Balen and Collar2015, Lee et al. Reference Lee, Chng and Eaton2016). Effects on wild bird populations are thought to be manifold, hastening the extinction and near-extinction of much sought after species such as Javan Pied Starling Gracupica jalla and other ‘Critically Endangered’ mynas, but also causing severe declines in birds such as white-eyes, flycatchers, prinias, and other once extremely common species from the wider landscape (Squires et al. in prep). While losses in myna species are well-established, largely because they are now extinct or incredibly localised, baseline data for most widespread species are almost totally lacking (e.g. Collen Reference Collen, Ram, Zamin and McRae2008). In these cases, declines are usually inferred from volumes or prices of birds in the market, or from anecdotal information (Harris et al. Reference Harris, Green, Prawiradilaga, Giam, Hikmatullah, Putra and Wilcove2015, BirdLife International 2020; but see Harris et al. Reference Harris, Tingley, Hua, Yong, Adeney, Lee, Marthy, Prawiradilaga, Sekercioglu, Suyadi and Wilcove2016). This is far from ideal in terms of prioritising species for action, predicting precise patterns of decline, communicating the nature of declines to relevant authorities and civil society, and ultimately in targeting conservation actions effectively.
The Javan White-eye Zosterops flavus is a coastal passerine largely restricted to the Javan coastal zone Endemic Bird Area which includes the coastal wetlands, grassland, mangroves, scrub, beaches, and mudflats of Java and Madura, Indonesia (BirdLife International 2020). An isolated population occurs in a number of scattered coastal areas in southern Borneo. As the coastal zone in Java and Madura has been densely inhabited for centuries, little of the natural coastal wetlands and grasslands remains (Stattersfield et al. Reference Stattersfield, Crosby, Long and Wege1998). In the 1980s and 1990s, only few records were available for just five scattered localities along the north coast of West and East Java: Pulau Dua, Muara Gembong, Pamanukan and Indramayu in the west, and Ujung Pangkah in the east (Allport and Milton Reference Allport and Milton1988, S. v. B. unpubl. data).
While no Javan White-eyes were identified in the commercial trade in Indonesia in 1991–1993 (Nash Reference Nash1993), the first decade of this millennium saw a sudden boom in numbers of white-eye hobbyists, with their own specialist clubs and song contests (Yuwono Reference Yuwono2013). A 2018 survey of bird ownership involving over 3,000 households in all six of Java’s provinces estimated that around 1,500,000 (± 400,000 SE) white-eyes, are currently kept in Java alone (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Collar, Lees, Moss, Yuda and Marsden2020). The majority of these individuals are likely to be Sangkar White-eye Zosterops melanurus (Lim et al. 2019), but Javan white-eyes are also heavily targeted presumably because of accessibility but also a demand for novelty. For example, significant numbers were observed in inventories of the main markets on Java in 2014 (Chng et al. Reference Chng, Eaton, Krishnasamy, Shepherd and Nijman2015), and 2015 (Chng and Eaton Reference Chng and Eaton2016). A single bird was found during a survey of Singapore bird shops in 2015 (Eaton et al. Reference Eaton, Shepherd, Rheindt, Harris, van Balen and Collar2015).
An additional immediate threat to the white-eye comes from the loss of habitat, especially the conversion of large areas of coastal wetlands (mangroves, coastal swamps), mainly for shrimp ponds (Masyuri Reference Boomgaard, Colombijn and Henley1997). The erosion induced by these aquacultures, a globally rising sea level, and subsidence due to groundwater and gas extraction along the north Javan coast (Chaussard et al. Reference Chaussard, Amelung, Abidin and Hong2013, Marfai Reference Marfai2014, van Wesenbeeck et al. Reference van Wesenbeeck, Balke, van Eijk, Tonneijck, Siry, Rudianto and Winterwerp2015) are additional threats.
In November–December 2006, and May–June 2009, a number of coastal wetland areas, identified from detailed land-use maps, were visited in collaboration with several Indonesian NGOs and universities. Inventories were made of the local coastal bird assemblages, with particular attention to four restricted-range species largely confined to the coastal zone, including the Javan White-eye Zosterops flavus. During these surveys, Javan White-eyes were counted at 19 sites along the north coast of West, Central, and East Java, including Madura. This 2006–2009 dataset represents a unique baseline against which to gauge the possible decline of the species from excessive trade in the last 10 years (Eaton et al. Reference Eaton, Shepherd, Rheindt, Harris, van Balen and Collar2015). We therefore aimed to repeat these surveys as closely as possible in 2018–2019 both to determine the current status of Javan White-eye, examine scale and patterns of abundance change over the last decade, and to identify key strongholds and new areas of importance for its conservation on Java.
Methods
Survey sites
Prior to the first surveys in 2006, localities to be visited were selected based on a literature review (Scott Reference Scott1989, Wibowo and Suyatno Reference Wibowo and Suyatno1999, Rombang and Rudyanto Reference Rombang and Rudyanto1999) and cartographic study. First, maps were scrutinized at large scale (Sandy Reference Sandy1986), based on the presence of estuaries, the remoteness from settlements, and the indication of swamps (rawa), and second, maps commercially available at Bakosurtanal at Cibinong (Peta Rupabumi Digital Indonesia series, scale 1 : 25.000; based on field surveys conducted in 1996–2000), were searched for indications of specific vegetation types (rawa = “swamp”; hutan rawa = “swamp forest”, semak/belukar (“secondary scrub”) to detect extant coastal habitat that might be suitable for Javan White-eye.
For the 2018–2019 surveys, areas were revisited as closely as possible the areas covered by the original surveys. At several sites (notably Muara Gembong and Pamanukan), we were forced to visit a different set of sub-localities in 2018–2019, as some of those visited in 2006–2009 had been submerged during the past decade. An additional four sites were visited for the first time in 2018–2019. Three localities that were known to contain Javan White-eyes before 2006, had not been visited in our surveys: Pulau Dua (Allport and Milton Reference Allport and Milton1988), Jakarta (e.g. Vorderman Reference Vorderman1883, Hoogerwerf and Rengers Hora Siccama Reference Hoogerwerf and Rengers Hora Siccama1937-Reference Hoogerwerf and Rengers Hora Siccama1938) and Indramayu (S. v. B. unpubl. data). Also the northern coast of Semarang, intensively surveyed since 2006, where the white-eye was found sparsely distributed in very small numbers (Baskoro Reference Baskoro2018), and four localities surveyed in 2016–2020 (Atlas Burung Indonesia 2020), with only two records of >10, and maximum 15 birds, have not been included in the present surveys.
Bird counts
We recorded Javan White-eye numbers along routes walked through as much as possible representative habitat at each site. Total length of routes covered through suitable white-eye habitat depended on accessibility of the areas, and therefore in the more extensive mangroves in the largest areas, coverage was proportionally less than the smaller areas. To counter any biased interpretation of the results, routes were recorded accurately for future repeat surveys.
Search effort in 2018–2019 was checked against that in 2006–2009. Efforts were made to equalise the amount of time spent at each site across the surveys, although logistical constraints meant that matching exact times and timings between the two surveys was unfeasible. In all but a few cases search effort in 2018–2019 was similar to that in 2006–2009. In all other cases, survey effort was allowed to be considerably less in 2018–2019, if these concerned relatively small areas and the survey was considered adequate, as no more white-eyes were expected to be found. All surveys were led by S. v. B.
As Lemon-bellied Zosterops chloris and Sangkar White-eye Z. melanurus may co-occur marginally, audio-recordings using a Zoom H5 solid State Recorder and Sennheiser MKH70 microphone for documentation and identification were made, in particular of distant individuals.
Data analysis
The abundance of white-eyes at each site in 2006–2009 and 2018–2019 surveys are expressed simply as the total count of individuals made. When visits were made to multiple areas of the same site, we summed the records from each area to give a site total. Differences between numbers of white-eyes recorded at sites between the two (paired) surveys were tested using a Wilcoxon signed ranks test. The degree of change in numbers of white-eyes recorded in the two surveys was expressed as the numbers recorded in 2018–2019 as a percentage of the number recorded in 2006–2009. We tested whether ‘declines’ had been steepest in areas that originally contained many birds, by examining the relationship between ‘starting’ number of birds in 2006–2009 and degree of change in numbers recorded across the survey (see above). We used a Spearman’s rank correlation analysis to test this relationship and also between the degree of change and longitude (West-East).
To go some way towards putting abundance change in the white-eye into the context of other bird species at the sites, we compared its changes in abundance to changes in the presence of (i) a suite of 12 little-traded bird species, and changes in abundance of (ii) three little-traded species with not dissimilar habitat requirements. The former (i) included: Sunda Collared Dove Streptopelia bitorquata, Cerulean Kingfisher Alcedo caerulescens, Collared Kingfisher Todiramphus chloris, Common Iora Aegithina tiphia, Australasian Reed Warbler Acrocephalus australis, Yellow-bellied Prinia Prinia flaviventris, Plain Prinia Prinia inornata, *Ashy Tailorbird Orthotomus ruficeps, Golden-bellied Gerygone Gerygone sulphurea, *Sunda Pied Fantail Rhipidura javanica, *Ornate Sunbird Cinnyris ornatus, and Brown-throated Sunbird Anthreptes malacensis; the latter (ii) are indicated with an asterisk.
To explore whether this suite of little-trapped birds had also declined/disappeared from the sites, we tested whether species richness of these species differed across the two surveys using a Wilcoxon signed ranks test, and determined whether declines in species richness among these birds at sites was correlated with degree of decline in the white-eye with Spearman’s rank test. For the three focal species, we report overall differences in numbers seen across all sites and tested whether the proportions of sites at which these species declined differed from the proportion of sites at which the white-eye declined using Chi-squared tests with Yates’ corrections. All analyses were done in RStudio (RStudio Team (2020).
Results
A total of 19 localities in which the presence of white-eyes was assessed in 2006–2009 have been re-visited (Table 1; locality names can be obtained from the first author). A total of 805 white-eyes were recorded at the 19 sites in 2006–2009 and 143 individuals in 2018–2019. White-eyes went unrecorded at five sites in 2018–2019, had much lower numbers (60% decrease) recorded in 2018–2019 at five sites, lower to almost equal numbers at seven sites, and had higher numbers in 2018-2019 than 2006-2009 at two sites. There was a significant reduction in white-eye numbers recorded across the 19 sites between 2006–2009 and 2018–2019 (Wilcoxon signed ranks test: V = 172, P = 0.002).
The three sites with highest recorded numbers in 2006: 73, 245, and 184 (502) individuals suffered the biggest ‘losses’ of birds with 11, 11, and 0 recorded in 2018–2019. Despite this, there was no significant relationship between numbers recorded in 2006 and percentage change in numbers in 2018 (rs = 0.15, n = 19, P = 0.54). Neither was there a significant relationship between ‘declines’ and longitudinal (West-East) coordinates (rs = 0.06, n = 19, P = 0.82).
There was no significant difference in species richness of the lesser-traded species across the 19 sites (Wilcoxon signed ranks test: V = 77, P = 0.66). Further, there was no relationship between changes in species richness of the little-trapped species and degree of ‘decline’ in the white-eye across sites (rs = 0.09, n = 19, P = 0.71). All three focal little-traded species were recorded in lower numbers overall across sites in 2018–2019 than in 2006–2009: Sunda Pied Fantail 81 individuals versus 88 individuals; Ashy Tailorbird 37 vs 62; Olive-backed Sunbird 61 vs 85, these ‘declines’ being far less steep than that of the white-eye. Absences from sites surveyed in 2018–2019 where they were recorded in 2006–2009 were rare in these species (fantail: one site; tailorbird: two sites; sunbird: three sites). The proportion of sites at which the white-eye had declined (16 of 19) was significantly greater than that for the fantail (7 of 19 sites; χ22 = 7.0, P = 0.008), but not for the tailorbird (9 of 15 sites; χ22 = 1.4, P = 0.23) or the sunbird (12 of 19 sites; χ22 = 1.2, P = 0.27). Small numbers of white-eyes were recorded at two new sites in Sidoarjo regency which were not visited in 2006–2009.
Discussion
Our surveys of 19 sites in coastal Java recorded 143 individual white-eyes, less than 18% of the 805 counted using similar methods around a decade earlier. We found a few new sites holding modest numbers of white-eyes. White-eyes had systematically ‘declined’ across the 19 sites, and although there was no consistent pattern that sites holding most birds in the earlier survey had seen steepest declines, three sites where over 500 birds were recorded in 2006–2009 had just three individuals in the recent survey. We did not undertake a formal analysis of habitat change at the sites but did find that a suite of lesser-traded co-occurring species had not declined or disappeared from the 19 sites in any way similar to the declines suffered by the white-eye. Taken together, we posit that the white-eye is likely to have undergone a serious decline, perhaps in the order of 80%, over the past decade. Our surveys sampled birds at the sites and as such tell us little about the population sizes of white-eyes at each site. This said, our surveys covered fairly well many of the ‘best’ sites for the species, so we suggest that its Java-wide population is certainly not large, perhaps in the order of 250–2,500 individuals.
White-eyes have become extremely heavily traded on Java over the past decade or so (Iqbal Reference Iqbal2015, Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Collar, Lees, Moss, Yuda and Marsden2020). While not commonly recorded during market or ownership surveys, on account of difficulties in species identification (van Balen Reference van Balen, del Hoyo, Elliott and Christie2008) and due also to the large numbers of Sangkar and other white-eyes for sale, Javan white-eyes are without doubt significantly traded. The tens of individuals that have been recorded in market surveys this decade are likely to make up a considerable proportion of the wild population on Java. At all localities, especially where white-eye numbers had decreased drastically, direct evidence or local reports indicated intensive trapping, usually with the use of lime sticks. Concurrent with this trapping pressure has been habitat change and we acknowledge that loss and degradation of mangroves and other suitable habitat for the white-eye has occurred at some sites – Symes et al. (Reference Symes, Edwards, Miettinen, Rheindt and Carrasco2018) estimated that around 15% of the species’ habitat has been lost in the last decade. Such figures for habitat lost seem more compatible with the degrees of decline we noted in some of the lesser-traded species such as Sunda Pied Fantail, Ashy Tailorbird, and Olive-backed Sunbird, than those of the white-eye. In none of the survey areas had suitable white-eye habitat disappeared or deteriorated entirely, except for large parts of the two of the larger areas that had inundated permanently since 2006–2009. In some areas, the extent of mangroves has actually expanded due to reforestation schemes (e.g. Randy et al. Reference Randy, Hutomo and Purnama2015). Detailed accounts of the habitat condition and protection measures already underway are not given here for security reasons but are available on request from the corresponding author.
It is striking that the three areas with largest numbers of white-eyes recorded in 2006–2009 had greatest losses. An obvious conclusion is that the abundance of white-eyes in the past was a major attraction for bird trappers, who were able to trap out large numbers of white-eyes effectively. In one of these sites, we were told that Javan White-eye was the main target for bird trappers coming from outside the region. The white-eye should not be a difficult bird to catch – the habitat is fairly low and often linear in nature, while the white-eye occurs in fairly large, cohesive, groups which may be trappable en masse, as they are strongly attracted by the distress calls of already captured conspecifics. In smaller mangrove plots, the few scattered Javan White-eye flocks were possibly less worth the effort, as are areas already depleted of most of their white-eyes. This possible ‘damping down’ of differences in population density of traded birds is not often confirmed but should be of great interest to conservationists and ecologists. On one hand it may act as a welcome brake on local trapping when local densities of remaining birds become not economically worthwhile harvesting but on the other it may be the nail in the coffin of remnant local populations unable to withstand Allee effects (Peteren and Levitan Reference Petersen, Levitan, Reynolds, Mace, Redford, Robinson, Gosling, Cowlishaw, Woodroffe and Gittleman2001) or other barriers to recovery (e.g. Bundy and Fanning Reference Bundy and Fanning2005) and doomed to extinction.
As far as we know, no single local Javan White-eye population is included in a national park on Java, however, in several areas, local conservation measures, such as the establishment of mangrove plots by replanting schemes may have/have had a positive effect on white-eye populations. Local awareness programmes at these sites should explain the Javan White-eyes’ ecological importance as insectivores, of mainly beetles and caterpillars (M. E. G. Bartels unpubl. data, Sody in Becking Reference Becking1989). We also recommend further surveys on Java, especially Madura island, as our own surveys were certainly not exhaustive. The Javan White-eye population on Kalimantan is also very little known, and a survey of the coastal areas of the southern half of the island is urgently needed, especially since the discovery of a shipment of 14 Javan White-eye offered for sale in Kediri (E Java), allegedly originating from Kalimantan (I. Kartiko pers. comm. 2020).
Since 2018, the Javan White-eye is protected under Indonesian law (Anonymous 2018). Law enforcement however may be a problem because of a fair number of near-identical yellow-bellied white-eye species in trade. The protection of all species of white-eye is therefore necessary. This said, there may be a ray of hope in the report that bird fanciers are slowly realizing that Javan White-eye are actually poor songsters (I. Kartiko pers. comm. 2021).
Acknowledgements
The surveys in 2006 and 2009 were sponsored financially by van Tienhovenstichting (The Netherlands), with local assistance and sponsorship of Burung Indonesia (Bogor) and field assistants: Ady Kristanto, Ni Made Rai, Ika Rani Suciharjo, Elfa Thufeil Rahmi, Valentine, Fakar Fariz, Lady Kutsiya, and Lina Susanti; the surveys in 2018-2019 were supported financially by the Oriental Bird Club and endorsed by Burung Indonesia, with field assistants: Zainuddin Thamrin, Nova & Teguh Lestyanto (Muara Gembong), Gerrit van Balen (Muara Gembong, Pamanukan), Ganjar Cahyo Aprianto (C Javan sites), Hendra Trisianto, Iwan Londo Febrianto, Cipto & Rasil Dwi Handono and Upuk (E Java sites). They are all thanked for their companionship and/or assistance with logistics. Pak Sahril is thanked for his help with accommodation and access to the Labuhan mangrove site on Madura. We thank one anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on the manuscript.