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Evidence of a shift in the cyclicity of Antarctic seabird dynamics linked to climate. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ecosystems and populations are influenced by both long-term climate trends and short-term fluctuations, making it essential to analyze long-term datasets of biological and physical factors for understanding these dynamics.
  • A wavelet analysis of long-term data for three Antarctic seabird species revealed that their populations exhibit cyclical fluctuations every 3-5 years, linked to environmental factors like sea-ice extent and the Southern Oscillation Index.
  • Significant changes in the relationship between environmental variables and seabird demographics were observed around the transition from the 1970s to the 1980s, indicating a possible regime shift in the Antarctic ecosystem affecting different species in varied ways.

Article Abstract

Ecosystems and populations are known to be influenced not only by long-term climatic trends, but also by other short-term climatic modes, such as interannual and decadal-scale variabilities. Because interactions between climatic forcing, biotic and abiotic components of ecosystems are subtle and complex, analysis of long-term series of both biological and physical factors is essential to understanding these interactions. Here, we apply a wavelet analysis simultaneously to long-term datasets on the environment and on the populations and breeding success of three Antarctic seabirds (southern fulmar, snow petrel, emperor penguin) breeding in Terre Adélie, to study the effects of climate fluctuations on Antarctic marine ecosystems. We show that over the past 40 years, populations and demographic parameters of the three species fluctuate with a periodicity of 3-5 years that was also detected in sea-ice extent and the Southern Oscillation Index. Although the major periodicity of these interannual fluctuations is not common to different species and environmental variables, their cyclic characteristics reveal a significant change since 1980. Moreover, sliding-correlation analysis highlighted the relationships between environmental variables and the demography of the three species, with important change of correlation occurring between the end of the 1970s and the beginning of the 1980s. These results suggest that a regime shift has probably occurred during this period, significantly affecting the Antarctic ecosystem, but with contrasted effects on the three species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1564086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2004.2978DOI Listing

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