AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines why black-tailed godwits have not shifted their breeding time despite rising spring temperatures and habitat loss.
  • Researchers used an Integral Projection Model to understand how temperature and habitat quality affect reproduction timing and population dynamics over 11 years.
  • The findings suggest that while there's a selection for earlier laying, warmer springs may eventually lead to earlier breeding, but only in less agricultural areas, highlighting the risks posed by climate change and degraded habitats to the species' survival.

Article Abstract

In seasonal environments, increasing spring temperatures lead many taxa to advance the timing of reproduction. Species that do not may suffer lower fitness. We investigated why black-tailed godwits (Limosa limosa limosa), a ground-breeding agricultural grassland shorebird, have not advanced timing of reproduction during the last three decades in the face of climate change and human-induced habitat degradation. We used data from an 11-year field study to parameterize an Integral Projection Model to predict how spring temperature and habitat quality simultaneously influence the timing of reproduction and population dynamics. We found apparent selection for earlier laying, but not a correlation between the laying dates of parents and their offspring. Nevertheless, in warmer springs, laying dates of adults show a stronger positive correlation with laying date in previous springs than in cooler ones, and this leads us to predict a slight advance in the timing of reproduction if spring temperatures continue to increase. We also show that only in landscapes with low agricultural activity, the population can continue to act as a source. This study shows how climate change and declining habitat quality may enhance extinction risk.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14406DOI Listing

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