4.8 Article

Quantifying long-term phenological patterns of aerial insectivores roosting in the Great Lakes region using weather surveillance radar

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16509

关键词

aerial insectivore; aeroecology; birds; machine learning; migration; NEXRAD; phenology; radar remote sensing; roosts

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [MSB-NES: 2017554, MSB-NES: 2017582, MSB-NES: 2017756]

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This study used data from the US weather radar network to investigate the relationship between the timing of aerial insectivores' roosting behavior and phenology. The results showed that the phenology has advanced by 2.26 days per decade at the regional scale, and this advancement is associated with changes in air temperature.
Organisms have been shifting their timing of life history events (phenology) in response to changes in the emergence of resources induced by climate change. Yet understanding these patterns at large scales and across long time series is often challenging. Here we used the US weather surveillance radar network to collect data on the timing of communal swallow and martin roosts and evaluate the scale of phenological shifts and its potential association with temperature. The discrete morning departures of these aggregated aerial insectivores from ground-based roosting locations are detected by radars around sunrise. For the first time, we applied a machine learning algorithm to automatically detect and track these large-scale behaviors. We used 21 years of data from 12 weather surveillance radar stations in the Great Lakes region to quantify the phenology in roosting behavior of aerial insectivores at three spatial levels: local roost cluster, radar station, and across the Great Lakes region. We show that their peak roosting activity timing has advanced by 2.26 days per decade at the regional scale. Similar signals of advancement were found at the station scale, but not at the local roost cluster scale. Air temperature trends in the Great Lakes region during the active roosting period were predictive of later stages of roosting phenology trends (75% and 90% passage dates). Our study represents one of the longest-term broad-scale phenology examinations of avian aerial insectivore species responding to environmental change and provides a stepping stone for examining potential phenological mismatches across trophic levels at broad spatial scales.

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