Phenology of two interdependent traits in migratory birds in response to climate change

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Abstract

In migratory birds, arrival date and hatching date are two key phonological markers that have responded to global warming. A body of knowledge exists relating these traits to evolutionary pressures. In this study,we formalize this knowledge into general mathematical assumptions, and use them in an ecoevolutionary model. In contrast to previous models, this study novelty accounts for both traits—arrival date and hatching date—and the interdependence between them, revealing when one, the other or both will respond to climate. For all models sharing the assumptions, the following phonological responses will occur. First, if the nestling-prey peak is late enough, hatching is synchronous with, and arrival date evolves independently of, prey phenology. Second, when resource availability constrains the length of the pre-laying period, hatching is adaptively asynchronous with prey phenology. Predictions for both traits comparewell with empirical observations. In response to advancing prey phenology, arrival date may advance, remain unchanged, or even become delayed; the latter occurring when egg-laying resources are only available relatively late in the season. The model shows that asynchronous hatching and unresponsive arrival date are not sufficient evidence that phonological adaptation is constrained. The work provides a framework for exploring microevolution of interdependent phenological traits.

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Kristensen, N. P., Johansson, J., Ripa, J., & Jonzén, N. (2015). Phenology of two interdependent traits in migratory birds in response to climate change. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 282(1807). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.0288

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