4.5 Article

Multispecies comparisons of adaptability to climate change: A role for life-history characteristics?

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 7, Issue 24, Pages 10492-10502

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.3517

Keywords

arctic; phenological advancement; phenological mismatch; phenotypic plasticity; shorebirds; trophic mismatch

Funding

  1. Arctic Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  2. US Fish and Wildlife Service
  3. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
  4. Bureau of Land Management
  5. Manomet, Inc.
  6. University of Alaska Fairbanks
  7. University of Colorado Denver
  8. Kansas State University
  9. University of Missouri Columbia

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Phenological advancement allows individuals to adapt to climate change by timing life-history events to the availability of key resources so that individual fitness is maximized. However, different trophic levels may respond to changes in their environment at different rates, potentially leading to a phenological mismatch. This may be especially apparent in the highly seasonal arctic environment that is experiencing the effects of climate change more so than any other region. During a 14-year study near Utqiagvik (formerly Barrow), Alaska, we estimated phenological advancement in egg laying in relation to snowmelt for eight arctic-breeding shorebirds and investigated potential linkages to species-specific life-history characteristics. We found that snowmelt advanced 0.8days/yearsix times faster than the prior 60-year period. During this same time, six of the eight species exhibited phenological advancement in laying dates (varying among species from 0.1 to 0.9days earlier per year), although no species appeared capable of keeping pace with advancing snowmelt. Phenological changes were likely the result of high phenotypic plasticity, as all species investigated in this study showed high interannual variability in lay dates. Commonality among species with similar response rates to timing of snowmelt suggests that nesting later and having an opportunistic settlement strategy may increase the adaptability of some species to changing climate conditions. Other life-history characteristics, such as migration strategy, previous site experience, and mate fidelity did not influence the ability of individuals to advance laying dates. As a failure to advance egg laying is likely to result in greater phenological mismatch, our study provides an initial assessment of the relative risk of species to long-term climatic changes.

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