Effects of habitat heterogeneity and local adaptation on the body condition of a forest passerine at the edge of its distributional range

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Abstract

We studied fluctuating asymmetry and feather growth rates as indicators of fitness of blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla) breeding at the border of their distribution range in the Iberian Peninsula. Iberian blackcaps increase their abundance with increasing rainfall and ground cover of brambles. In border habitats, they are sedentary and morphologically different from migrants, suggesting that they could be adapted to peripheral conditions. We tested whether juvenile body condition depends on (1) distance from the centre of the range, (2) mean precipitation or (3) bramble cover. Controlling for environmental variation, we tested for differences between migratory and sedentary populations. Body condition varied across the Iberian gradient in parallel with changes in precipitation. Controlling for this effect, sedentary populations were in better body condition than migratory populations. Our results support the idea that environmental heterogeneity causes fitness to fluctuate across species' ranges, and also that local adaptation may mean that peripheral populations are more than a 'tail end' of the species. © 2003 The Linnean Society of London.

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Carbonell, R., Pérez-Tris, J., & Tellería, J. L. (2003). Effects of habitat heterogeneity and local adaptation on the body condition of a forest passerine at the edge of its distributional range. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 78(4), 479–488. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0024-4066.2002.00156.x

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