AI Article Synopsis

  • The decline of long-distance migratory songbirds is linked to climate change impacting their food availability, causing a mismatch with their spring arrival dates.
  • In a study tracking 52 purple martins over 7,300 km in 2012, which was the warmest spring on record in eastern North America, researchers found no significant changes in migration timing compared to previous years.
  • The migration patterns were influenced more by breeding latitude and sex rather than ecological cues like temperature and rainfall, indicating some species may have limited capacity to adapt their migration in response to climate changes.

Article Abstract

The decline of long distance migratory songbirds has been linked to an increasing mismatch between spring arrival date and timing of food availability caused by climate change. It is unclear to what extent individuals can adjust migration timing or en route rate in response to annual variation in temperature at breeding sites. We tracked the ca. 7300 km spring migration of 52 purple martins Progne subis from the Amazon basin to two breeding sites in eastern North America. Spring 2012 was the warmest on record in eastern North America, but contrary to predictions, this did not result in earlier departure, faster migration, or earlier arrival at breeding areas compared with earlier years. Temperatures and rainfall in the Amazon basin at the time of departure were not higher in 2012, and conditions along migration routes did not give consistent signals of a warmer spring at the breeding site. Once in North America, individuals likely had limited opportunity to speed up their migration because this final portion of the journey was already very rapid (570 km/d; 4-5 d in duration). Migration timing over the entire journey was best predicted by breeding latitude and sex and was not sensitive to ecological cues (temperature and rainfall amount) at departure from South American overwintering sites or en route, in contrast to recent studies of other songbirds. Our results provide the first direct evidence for a mismatch between higher spring temperatures at breeding sites and departure schedules of individual songbirds, and suggest phenotypic responses to short-term climatic warming may be limited for some species. Further direct-tracking data with greater geographic and temporal scope is needed to test for individual plasticity in response to temperature and rainfall along migratory routes for this, and other, species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3669305PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0064587PLOS

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