Climate warming, ecological mismatch at arrival and population decline in migratory birds

Author:

Saino Nicola1,Ambrosini Roberto2,Rubolini Diego1,von Hardenberg Jost3,Provenzale Antonello3,Hüppop Kathrin4,Hüppop Ommo4,Lehikoinen Aleksi5,Lehikoinen Esa6,Rainio Kalle5,Romano Maria1,Sokolov Leonid7

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Biologia, Università di Milano, via Celoria 26, 20133 Milano, Italy

2. Dipartimento di Biotecnologie e Bioscienze, Università di Milano-Bicocca, Piazza della Scienza 2, 20126 Milano, Italy

3. ISAC-CNR, Corso Fiume 4, 10133 Torino, Italy

4. Institut für Vogelforschung ‘Vogelwarte Helgoland’, Inselstation Helgoland, 27494 Helgoland, Germany

5. Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki, Finland

6. Section of Ecology, University of Turku, 20014 Turku, Finland

7. Biological Station Rybachy, Zoological Institute, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia

Abstract

Climate is changing at a fast pace, causing widespread, profound consequences for living organisms. Failure to adjust the timing of life-cycle events to climate may jeopardize populations by causing ecological mismatches to the life cycle of other species and abiotic factors. Population declines of some migratory birds breeding in Europe have been suggested to depend on their inability to adjust migration phenology so as to keep track of advancement of spring events at their breeding grounds. In fact, several migrants have advanced their spring arrival date, but whether such advancement has been sufficient to compensate for temporal shift in spring phenophases or, conversely, birds have become ecologically mismatched, is still an unanswered question, with very few exceptions. We used a novel approach based on accumulated winter and spring temperatures (degree-days) as a proxy for timing of spring biological events to test if the progress of spring at arrival to the breeding areas by 117 European migratory bird species has changed over the past five decades. Migrants, and particularly those wintering in sub-Saharan Africa, now arrive at higher degree-days and may have therefore accumulated a ‘thermal delay’, thus possibly becoming increasingly mismatched to spring phenology. Species with greater ‘thermal delay’ have shown larger population decline, and this evidence was not confounded by concomitant ecological factors or by phylogenetic effects. These findings provide general support to the largely untested hypotheses that migratory birds are becoming ecologically mismatched and that failure to respond to climate change can have severe negative impacts on their populations. The novel approach we adopted can be extended to the analysis of ecological consequences of phenological response to climate change by other taxa.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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