Author:
Strong Courtenay,Zuckerberg Benjamin,Betancourt Julio L.,Koenig Walter D.
Abstract
Pine Siskins exemplify normally boreal seed-eating birds that can be sparse or absent across entire regions of North America in one year and then appear in large numbers the next. These dramatic avian “irruptions” are thought to stem from intermittent but broadly synchronous seed production (masting) in one year and meager seed crops in the next. A prevalent hypothesis is that widespread masting in the boreal forest at high latitudes is driven primarily by favorable climate during the two to three consecutive years required to initiate and mature seed crops in most conifers. Seed production is expensive for trees and is much reduced in the years following masting, driving boreal birds to search elsewhere for food and overwintering habitat. Despite this plausible logic, prior efforts to discover climate-irruption relationships have been inconclusive. Here, analysis of more than 2 million Pine Siskin observations from Project FeederWatch, a citizen science program, reveals two principal irruption modes (North-South and West-East), both of which are correlated with climate variability. The North-South irruption mode is, in part, influenced by winter harshness, but the predominant climate drivers of both modes manifest in the warm season as continental-scale pairs of oppositely signed precipitation and temperature anomalies (i.e., dipoles). The climate dipoles juxtapose favorable and unfavorable conditions for seed production and wintering habitat, motivating a push-pull paradigm to explain irruptions of Pine Siskins and possibly other boreal bird populations in North America.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Reference60 articles.
1. Berthold P Gwinner E Sonnenschein E (2003) Avian Migration (Springer, New York)
2. Cox GW (2010) Bird Migration and Global Change (Island Press, Washington, DC)
3. Newton I (2008) Bird Migration (Academic, London)
4. Obligate and facultative migration in birds: ecological aspects
5. Rowher S Butler LK Froehlich SR (2005) Ecology and demography of east-west differences in molt scheduling of neotropical migrant passerines. Birds of Two Worlds: The Ecology and Evolution of Migration, eds Greenberg R Marra PM (Johns Hopkins Univ Press, Baltimore, MD), pp 87–106
Cited by
54 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献