4.7 Article

Phenological sensitivity and seasonal variability explain climate-driven trends in Mediterranean butterflies

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0251

Keywords

global warming; insect phenology; population trends; species' life-history traits; host plant specialization; long-term trends

Funding

  1. Departament d'Accio Climatica, Alimentacio i Agenda Rural de la Generalitat de Catalunya
  2. Diputacio de Barcelona
  3. Andorran Government
  4. Catalan Government [SGR2017-1690]
  5. Spanish MCIU Ministry through the NEWFORLAND research project [RTI2018-099397-B-C21 MCIU/AEI/ERDF]
  6. DEPICT research project [PID2020114324GB-C2]
  7. Govern de les Illes Balears [FPI-CAIB-2018]

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This study investigates the relationship between phenological shifts and population trends in north-western Mediterranean butterflies. They found that most species did not change their phenology despite climate warming, leading to a decline in overall species abundance. They also found that phenological sensitivity can predict population trends.
Although climate-driven phenological shifts have been documented for many taxa across the globe, we still lack knowledge of the consequences they have on populations. Here, we used a comprehensive database comprising 553 populations of 51 species of north-western Mediterranean butterflies to investigate the relationship between phenology and population trends in a 26-year period. Phenological trends and sensitivity to climate, along with various species traits, were used to predict abundance trends. Key ecological traits accounted for a general decline of more than half of the species, most of which, surprisingly, did not change their phenology under a climate warming scenario. However, this was related to the regional cooling in a short temporal window that includes late winter and early spring, during which most species concentrate their development. Finally, we demonstrate that phenological sensitivity-but not phenological trends-predicted population trends, and argue that species that best adjust their phenology to inter-annual climate variability are more likely to maintain a synchronization with trophic resources, thereby mitigating possible negative effects of climate change. Our results reflect the importance of assessing not only species' trends over time but also species' abilities to respond to a changing climate based on their sensitivity to temperature.

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