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DOI10.1111/1365-2656.14113
How interacting anthropogenic pressures alter the plasticity of breeding time in two common songbirds
发表日期2024
ISSN0021-8790
EISSN1365-2656
英文摘要Phenological adjustment is the first line of adaptive response of vertebrates when seasonality is disrupted by climate change. The prevailing response is to reproduce earlier in warmer springs, but habitat changes, such as forest degradation, are expected to affect phenological plasticity, for example, due to loss of reliability of environmental cues used by organisms to time reproduction. Relying on a two-decade, country-level capture-based monitoring of common songbirds' reproduction, we investigated how habitat anthropization, here characterized by the rural-urban and forest-farmland gradients, affected the average phenology and plasticity to local temperature in two common species, the great tit Parus major and the blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus. We built a hierarchical model that simultaneously estimated fledging phenology and its response to spring temperatures based on the changes in the proportion of juveniles captured over the breeding season. Both species fledge earlier in warmer sites (blue tit: 2.94 days/degrees C, great tit: 3.83 days/degrees C), in warmer springs (blue tit: 2.49 days/degrees C, great tit: 2.75 days/degrees C) and in most urbanized habitats (4 days for blue tit and 2 days for great tit). The slope of the reaction norm of fledging phenology to spring temperature varied across sites in both species, but this variation was explained by habitat anthropization only in the deciduous forest specialist, the blue tit. In this species, the responses to spring temperature were shallower in agricultural landscapes and slightly steeper in more urban areas. Habitat anthropization did not explain variation in the slope of the reaction norm in the habitat-generalist species (great tit), for which mean fledgling phenology and plasticity were correlated (i.e., steeper response in later sites). The effects of habitat change on phenological reaction norms provide another way through which combined environmental degradations may threaten populations' persistence, to an extent depending on species and on the changes in their prey phenology and abundance. In this study, we developed a method that enables the estimation of phenological reactions to local temperatures using Constant Effort Site bird ringing data. Our findings suggest that habitat anthropization explains variation in phenological plasticity but only for the most specialist species (blue tit).image
英文关键词anthropization; breeding phenology; global change; plasticity; temperature; timing
语种英语
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Zoology
WOS类目Ecology ; Zoology
WOS记录号WOS:001230507000001
来源期刊JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/292251
作者单位Universite PSL; Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE); Institut Agro; Montpellier SupAgro; CIRAD; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Universite Paul-Valery; Universite de Montpellier; La Rochelle Universite; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute of Ecology & Environment (INEE); Sorbonne Universite; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute of Ecology & Environment (INEE); Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN); Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN)
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. How interacting anthropogenic pressures alter the plasticity of breeding time in two common songbirds[J],2024.
APA (2024).How interacting anthropogenic pressures alter the plasticity of breeding time in two common songbirds.JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY.
MLA "How interacting anthropogenic pressures alter the plasticity of breeding time in two common songbirds".JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY (2024).
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