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Weather effects on avian breeding performance and implications of climate change

Dates

Publication Date
2012-06-01 05:00:00
Start Date
2012-06-01 05:00:00
End Date
2012-06-01 05:00:00

Citation

Susan K. Skagen(Author), Amy A. Yackel Adams(Author), 2012-06-01(Publication), Weather effects on avian breeding performance and implications of climate change, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1890/11-0291.1/full

Summary

The influence of recent climate change on the world’s biota has manifested broadly, resulting in latitudinal range shifts, advancing dates of arrival of migrants and onset of breeding, and altered community relationships. Climate change elevates conservation concerns worldwide because it will likely exacerbate a broad range of identified threats to animal populations. In the past few decades, grassland birds have declined faster than other North American avifauna, largely due to habitat threats such as the intensification of agriculture. We examine the effects of local climatic variations on the breeding performance of a bird endemic to the shortgrass prairie, the Lark Bunting (Calamospiza melanocorys) and discuss the implications [...]

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Great Plains Landscape Conservation Cooperative(Distributor)

Purpose

This manuscript presents a detailed analysis of the effect of local climate variation on reproductive parameters of an endemic prairie passerine, the Lark Bunting (see Plate 1). This species is suited to the study of climate change impacts because of the availability of long-term data on reproduction, demography, and local climate (Simmons et al. 2004). It also can serve as a model to examine potential impacts of climate on other bird species that are similar in ecology and habitat preference, such as Baird's Sparrow (Ammodramus bairdii), Horned Lark (Eremophila alpestris), and other prairie-nesting birds. During seven breeding seasons, we quantified vegetative features, clutch size, nest survival, and productivity of grassland birds in 27 randomly selected study sites. Weather during our study was fairly representative of the past 70 years of recent climate. Here we model the influence of weather variables on reproductive parameters while controlling for the influences of nest age, vegetation characteristics of the site, and seasonal timing. We use our best-approximating model to generate predictions of reproductive parameters under various future climate scenarios. We discuss the implications of our findings for declining prairie bird populations relative to future climate predictions within the context of paleoclimatic conditions on the Great Plains of North America and the evolutionary history of prairie breeding birds.

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Type Scheme Key
info:doi/ info:doi/ 10.1890/11-0291.1

Citation Extension

citationTypepublication
editionVolume 22, Issue 4
journalEcological Applications
languageeng
parts
typePage Number
value1131-1145

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