Capp Elliot, Liebl Andrea L, Cones Alexandra G, Russell Andrew F
UNSW Arid Zone Research Station School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia.
Centre for Ecology and Conservation College of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Exeter Penryn, Cornwall UK.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Dec 5;8(1):696-705. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3524. eCollection 2018 Jan.
Projecting population responses to climate change requires an understanding of climatic impacts on key components of reproduction. Here, we investigate the associations among breeding phenology, climate and incubation schedules in the chestnut-crowned babbler (), a 50 g passerine with female-only, intermittent incubation that typically breeds from late winter (July) to early summer (November). During daylight hours, breeding females spent an average of 33 min on the nest incubating (hereafter on-bouts) followed by 24-min foraging (hereafter off-bouts), leading to an average daytime nest attentiveness of 60%. Nest attentiveness was 25% shorter than expected from allometric calculations, largely because off-bout durations were double the expected value for a species with 16 g clutches (4 eggs × 4 g/egg). On-bout durations and daily attentiveness were both negatively related to ambient temperature, presumably because increasing temperatures allowed more time to be allocated to foraging with reduced detriment to egg cooling. By contrast, on-bout durations were positively associated with wind speed, in this case because increasing wind speed exacerbated egg cooling during off-bouts. Despite an average temperature change of 12°C across the breeding season, breeding phenology had no effect on incubation schedules. This surprising result arose because of a positive relationship between temperature and wind speed across the breeding season: Any benefit of increasing temperatures was canceled by apparently detrimental consequences of increasing wind speed on egg cooling. Our results indicate that a greater appreciation for the associations among climatic variables and their independent effects on reproductive investment are necessary to understand the effects of changing climates on breeding phenology.
预测种群对气候变化的反应需要了解气候对繁殖关键组成部分的影响。在此,我们研究了栗冠丛鸦(一种体重50克的雀形目鸟类,只有雌性进行间歇性孵化,通常从冬末(7月)繁殖至初夏(11月))的繁殖物候、气候与孵化时间表之间的关联。在白天,繁殖期的雌性平均花费33分钟在巢中孵化(以下简称“孵化时段”),随后是24分钟的觅食时间(以下简称“非孵化时段”),导致白天平均巢关注度为60%。巢关注度比根据异速生长计算预期的短25%,这主要是因为非孵化时段的时长是产卵量为16克(4枚卵×4克/枚卵)的物种预期值的两倍。孵化时段时长和每日关注度均与环境温度呈负相关,据推测是因为温度升高使得有更多时间可用于觅食,同时对卵冷却的损害减小。相比之下,孵化时段时长与风速呈正相关,这种情况下是因为风速增加加剧了非孵化时段的卵冷却。尽管整个繁殖季节平均温度变化了12°C,但繁殖物候对孵化时间表没有影响。这个令人惊讶的结果出现是因为整个繁殖季节温度与风速之间呈正相关:温度升高带来的任何益处都被风速增加对卵冷却造成的明显不利后果抵消了。我们的结果表明,要理解气候变化对繁殖物候的影响,需要更深入了解气候变量之间的关联及其对繁殖投资的独立影响。