Vulnerable Neotropical migratory songbird demonstrates flexibility in space use in response to rainfall change

Author:

Brunner Alicia R1ORCID,Marra Peter P2,Tonra Christopher M1

Affiliation:

1. School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA

2. Department of Biology and McCourt School of Public Policy, Georgetown University, Washington, District of Columbia, USA

Abstract

Abstract Behavioral flexibility of individuals is essential if organisms are to ultimately adapt to climate change. As environmental conditions, such as precipitation patterns become increasingly variable, fine-scale spatiotemporal flexibility in space use may allow for individuals to track resources during periods of adverse or atypical conditions. Individual behavioral flexibility is observable over short timeframes and can therefore be used to assess resilience of a species to projected shifts in climate. The goal of our study was to determine if and how individuals modified their space and habitat use in response to rainfall-driven changes in resources throughout a period of atypical seasonal rainfall patterns. We used radio telemetry to estimate home ranges of nonbreeding Swainson’s Warblers (Limnothlypis swainsonii) in 2 time frames (bi-seasonally and bi-weekly) in Jamaica during dry and wet periods. We measured habitat structure and food (leaf litter arthropod) availability within each home range to determine possible predictors of space use change. Individuals modified the area and/or location of their home ranges with changes in precipitation, and those occupying more open habitats had greater changes in home range area as seasonal rainfall increased. As food increased following rain, individuals constricted their home ranges (bi-weekly) or shifted spatially (bi-seasonally) to a novel area with greater food availability. This suggests individuals are able to rapidly respond to how their environment changes, presumably adjusting to trade-offs between home range size and resource availability. This flexibility may be a key behavioral component in enduring long-term increasingly unpredictable environmental variability and may have population-level consequences. These responses are, however, mediated by habitat, suggesting the ability to respond to variable or poor conditions is not homogeneous across a population.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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