Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis (CEES), Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, P. O. Box 1066, Blindern, 0316, Oslo, Norway.
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Thormøhlens Gate 55, 5006, Bergen, Norway.
BMC Ecol. 2020 Dec 17;20(1):70. doi: 10.1186/s12898-020-00338-y.
Earlier breeding is one of the strongest responses to global change in birds and is a key factor determining reproductive success. In most studies of climate effects, the focus has been on large-scale environmental indices or temperature averaged over large geographical areas, neglecting that animals are affected by the local conditions in their home ranges. In riverine ecosystems, climate change is altering the flow regime, in addition to changes resulting from the increasing demand for renewable and clean hydropower. Together with increasing temperatures, this can lead to shifts in the time window available for successful breeding of birds associated with the riverine habitat. Here, we investigated specifically how the environmental conditions at the territory level influence timing of breeding in a passerine bird with an aquatic lifestyle, the white-throated dipper Cinclus cinclus. We relate daily river discharge and other important hydrological parameters, to a long-term dataset of breeding phenology (1978-2015) in a natural river system.
Dippers bred earlier when winter river discharge and groundwater levels in the weeks prior to breeding were high, and when there was little snow in the catchment area. Breeding was also earlier at lower altitudes, although the effect dramatically declined over the period. This suggests that territories at higher altitudes had more open water in winter later in the study period, which permitted early breeding also here. Unexpectedly, the largest effect inducing earlier breeding time was territory river discharge during the winter months and not immediately prior to breeding. The territory river discharge also increased during the study period.
The observed earlier breeding can thus be interpreted as a response to climate change. Measuring environmental variation at the scale of the territory thus provides detailed information about the interactions between organisms and the abiotic environment.
更早的繁殖是鸟类对全球变化的最强反应之一,也是决定繁殖成功的关键因素。在大多数关于气候影响的研究中,重点关注的是大规模的环境指数或大面积地理区域的平均温度,而忽略了动物受到其栖息地局部条件的影响。在河流生态系统中,气候变化除了导致可再生和清洁能源对水的需求增加所带来的变化外,还改变了水流模式。与温度升高一起,这可能导致与河流栖息地相关的鸟类成功繁殖的可用时间窗口发生变化。在这里,我们专门研究了在具有水生生活方式的雀形目鸟类中,领地水平的环境条件如何影响繁殖时间。我们将每日河流流量和其他重要水文参数与一个自然河流系统中繁殖物候学的长期数据集(1978-2015 年)相关联。
当繁殖前几周冬季河流流量和地下水水位高,以及集水区降雪量少时,白喉河雀更早繁殖;在较低海拔地区繁殖也更早,尽管这种影响在研究期间急剧下降。这表明,在研究后期,海拔较高的领地冬季有更多的开阔水面,也允许更早的繁殖。出乎意料的是,导致更早繁殖时间的最大影响是冬季领地河流流量,而不是繁殖前立即。该领地河流流量也在研究期间增加。
因此,观察到的更早的繁殖可以被解释为对气候变化的反应。在领地尺度上测量环境变化提供了关于生物与非生物环境相互作用的详细信息。