Back to Search
Start Over
Climate change and unequal phenological changes across four trophic levels: constraints or adaptations?
- Source :
- Journal of Animal Ecology, 78(1), 73-83. John Wiley and Sons Ltd, Journal of Animal Ecology, 78, 1, pp. 73-83, Journal of Animal Ecology, 78(1), 73-83. Wiley, Journal of Animal Ecology, 78, 73-83
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- Climate change has been shown to affect the phenology of many organisms, but interestingly these shifts are often unequal across trophic levels, causing a mismatch between the phenology of organisms and their food.We consider two alternative hypotheses: consumers are constrained to adjust sufficiently to the lower trophic level, or prey species react more strongly than their predators to reduce predation. We discuss both hypotheses with our analyses of changes in phenology across four trophic levels: tree budburst, peak biomass of herbivorous caterpillars, breeding phenology of four insectivorous bird species and an avian predator.In our long-term study, we show that between 1988 and 2005, budburst advanced (not significantly) with 0.17 d yr(-1), while between 1985 and 2005 both caterpillars (0.75 d year(-1)) and the hatching date of the passerine species (range for four species: 0.36-0.50 d year(-1)) have advanced, whereas raptor hatching dates showed no trend.The caterpillar peak date was closely correlated with budburst date, as were the passerine hatching dates with the peak caterpillar biomass date. In all these cases, however, the slopes were significantly less than unity, showing that the response of the consumers is weaker than that of their food. This was also true for the avian predator, for which hatching dates were not correlated with the peak availability of fledgling passerines. As a result, the match between food demand and availability deteriorated over time for both the passerines and the avian predators.These results could equally well be explained by consumers' insufficient responses as a consequence of constraints in adapting to climate change, or by them trying to escape predation from a higher trophic level, or both. Selection on phenology could thus be both from matches of phenology with higher and lower levels, and quantifying these can shed new light on why some organisms do adjust their phenology to climate change, while others do not.
- Subjects :
- Parus ater
Greenhouse Effect
Avian clutch size
Food Chain
Time Factors
Animal Ecology and Physiology
budburst
breeding date
phenology
Ficedula hypoleuca
Trees
Predation
Life history theory
LONG-DISTANCE MIGRANT
Food chain
Cyanistes caeruleus
Parus major
biology.animal
Accipiter nisus
timing
LAYING DATES
WINTER MOTH
Animals
TIT PARUS-MAJOR
Passeriformes
AVIAN REPRODUCTION
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Trophic level
Biomass (ecology)
biology
Phenology
Ecology
CLUTCH SIZE
FICEDULA-HYPOLEUCA
Passerine
Lepidoptera
SPARROWHAWKS ACCIPITER-NISUS
Female
Animal Science and Zoology
LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS
GREAT TITS
Quercus robus
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00218790
- Volume :
- 78
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Animal Ecology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1e3e3f3085b81f57466e95e746a4affa