Greig Emma I, Wood Eric M, Bonter David N
Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 Apr 12;284(1852). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0256.
Anthropogenic changes to the landscape and climate cause novel ecological and evolutionary pressures, leading to potentially dramatic changes in the distribution of biodiversity. Warm winter temperatures can shift species' distributions to regions that were previously uninhabitable. Further, urbanization and supplementary feeding may facilitate range expansions and potentially reduce migration tendency. Here we explore how these factors interact to cause non-uniform effects across a species's range. Using 17 years of data from the citizen science programme Project FeederWatch, we examined the relationships between urbanization, winter temperatures and the availability of supplementary food (i.e. artificial nectar) on the winter range expansion (more than 700 km northward in the past two decades) of Anna's hummingbirds (). We found that Anna's hummingbirds have colonized colder locations over time, were more likely to colonize sites with higher housing density and were more likely to visit feeders in the expanded range compared to the historical range. Additionally, their range expansion mirrored a corresponding increase over time in the tendency of people to provide nectar feeders in the expanded range. This work illustrates how humans may alter the distribution and potentially the migratory behaviour of species through landscape and resource modification.
人类对景观和气候的改变造成了新的生态和进化压力,导致生物多样性分布可能发生巨大变化。冬季温暖的气温会使物种分布转移到以前无法居住的地区。此外,城市化和补充喂食可能会促进物种范围的扩大,并有可能降低其迁徙倾向。在此,我们探讨这些因素如何相互作用,从而在一个物种的分布范围内产生不均匀的影响。利用公民科学项目“喂食者观察计划”的17年数据,我们研究了城市化、冬季气温和补充食物(即人工花蜜)的可获得性与安娜氏蜂鸟冬季分布范围扩张(在过去二十年向北超过700公里)之间的关系。我们发现,随着时间的推移,安娜氏蜂鸟已在更寒冷的地区定居,更有可能在住房密度较高的地点定居,并且与历史分布范围相比,在扩张后的分布范围内更有可能光顾喂食器。此外,它们的分布范围扩张反映出随着时间的推移,人们在扩张后的分布范围内提供花蜜喂食器的倾向也相应增加。这项研究表明人类可能如何通过景观和资源改变来改变物种的分布以及潜在的迁徙行为。