Global phenological insensitivity to shifting ocean temperatures among seabirds

Autor/a

Keogan, Katharine

Daunt, Francis

Wanless, S. (Sarah)

Phillips, Richard A.

Walling, Craig A.

Agnew, Philippa

Ainley, David

Anker-Nilssen, Tycho

Ballard, Grant

Barrett, Robert T.

Barton, Kerry J.

Bech, Claus

Becker, Peter H.

Berglund, Per-Arvid

Bollache, Loïc

Bond, Alexander L.

Bouwhuis, Sandra

Bradley, Russell W.

Burr, Zofia M.

Camphuysen, Kees

Catry, Paulo

Chiaradia, André

Christensen-Dalsgaard, Signe

Cuthbert, Richard J.

Dehnhard, Nina

Descamps, Sébastien

Diamon, Tony

Divoky, George

Drummond, Hugh

Dugger, Katie M.

Dunn, Michael J

Emmerson, Louise

Erikstad, Kjell Einar

Fort, Jérôme

Fraser, William

Genovart, Meritxell

Gilg, Olivier

González-Solís, Jacob

Granadeiro, José Pedro

Gremillet, David

Hansen, Jannik

Hanssen, Sveinn Are

Harris, Mike

Hedd, April

Hinke, Jefferson

Igual, José Manuel

Jahncke, Jaime

Jones, Ian

Kappes, Peter J.

Lang, Johannes

Langse, Magdalene

Lescroël, Amélie

Lorentsen, Svein-Håkon

Lyver, Phil O'B.

Mallory, Mark L.

Moe, Børge

Montevecchi, William A.

Monticelli, David

Mostello, Carolyn

Newell, Mark

Nicholson, Lisa

Nisbet, Ian

Olsson, Olof

Oro, Daniel

Pattison, Vivian

Poisbleau, Maud

Pyk, Tanya

Quintana, Flavio

Ramos, Jaime A.

Ramos i Garcia, Raül

Reiertsen, Tone Kirstin

Rodríguez, Cristina

Ryan, Peter G.

Sanz-Aguilar, Ana

Schmidt, Niels M.

Shannon, Paula

Sittler, Benoit

Southwell, Colin

Surman, Christopher

Svagelj, Walter S.

Trivelpiece, Wayne

Warzybok, Pete

Weimerskirch, Henri

Wilson, Peter R.

Wood, Andrew G.

Phillimore, Albert B.

Lewis, Sue

Altres autors/es

Watanuki, Yutaka

Data de publicació

2019-04-03T10:01:40Z

2019-04-03T10:01:40Z

2018-04-02

2019-04-03T10:01:40Z

Resum

Reproductive timing in many taxa plays a key role in determining breeding productivity1, and is often sensitive to climatic conditions2. Current climate change may alter the timing of breeding at different rates across trophic levels, potentially resulting in temporal mismatch between the resource requirements of predators and their prey3. This is of particular concern for higher-trophic-level organisms, whose longer generation times confer a lower rate of evolutionary rescue than primary producers or consumers4. However, the disconnection between studies of ecological change in marine systems makes it difficult to detect general changes in the timing of reproduction5. Here, we use a comprehensive meta-analysis of 209 phenological time series from 145 breeding populations to show that, on average, seabird populations worldwide have not adjusted their breeding seasons over time (−0.020 days yr−1) or in response to sea surface temperature (SST) (−0.272 days °C−1) between 1952 and 2015. However, marked between-year variation in timing observed in resident species and some Pelecaniformes and Suliformes (cormorants, gannets and boobies) may imply that timing, in some cases, is affected by unmeasured environmental conditions. This limited temperature-mediated plasticity of reproductive timing in seabirds potentially makes these top predators highly vulnerable to future mismatch with lower-trophic-level resources2.

Tipus de document

Article


Versió acceptada

Llengua

Anglès

Publicat per

Nature Publishing Group

Documents relacionats

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0115-z

Nature Climate Change, 2018, vol. 8, p. 313-318

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0115-z

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Drets

(c) Keogan, Katharine et al., 2018