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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||||||
![]() Global Change BiologyVolume 14 Issue 9, Pages 1959 - 1972 Published Online: 28 Jun 2008 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 185K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Bird migration times, climate change, and changing population sizes Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 Blackwell Publishing KEYWORDS climate change • global warming • Manomet • Massachusetts • migratory birds • panel analysis • phenology • population sizes • spring migration ABSTRACTPast studies of bird migration times have shown great variation in migratory responses to climate change. We used 33 years of bird capture data (1970–2002) from Manomet, Massachusetts to examine variation in spring migration times for 32 species of North American passerines. We found that changes in first arrival dates – the unit of observation used in most studies of bird migration times – often differ dramatically from changes in the mean arrival date of the migration cohort as a whole. In our study, the earliest recorded springtime arrival date for each species occurred 0.20 days later each decade. In contrast, the mean arrival dates for birds of each species occurred 0.78 days earlier each decade. The difference in the two trends was largely explained by declining migration cohort sizes, a factor not examined in many previous studies. We found that changes in migration cohort or population sizes may account for a substantial amount of the variation in previously documented changes in migration times. After controlling for changes in migration cohort size, we found that climate variables, migration distance, and date of migration explained portions of the variation in migratory changes over time. In particular, short-distance migrants appeared to respond to changes in temperature, while mid-distance migrants responded particularly strongly to changes in the Southern Oscillation Index. The migration times of long-distance migrants tended not to change over time. Our findings suggest that previously reported changes in migration times may need to be reinterpreted to incorporate changes in migration cohort sizes. Received 2 October 2007; revised version received 8 January 2008 and accepted 25 January 2008 |
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