Differential changes in life cycle-event phenology provide a window into regional population declines

Differential changes in life cycle-event phenology provide a window into regional population declines

Biology Letters, 2022

Citation

Hanmer, H.J., Boersch-Supan, P.H. & Robinson, R.A. 2022. Differential changes in life cycle-event phenology provide a window into regional population declines. Biology Letters doi:10.1098/rsbl.2022.0186

Overview

New research from BTO investigates the effects of climate change on Willow Warblers. The findings, based on volunteers’ ringing and nest recording data, help to explain why birds breeding in different parts of Britain are being affected in different ways.

In more detail

Funding

This study was funded by The British and Irish Ringing Scheme.

Acknowledgements

This work used the JASMIN data analysis environment (http://jasmin.ac.uk). The ringing and nest record schemes are supported by the JNCC and we thank the many hundreds of volunteers for collecting these data. This analysis was funded by generous support from the ringers.

Abstract

Climate change affects the phenology of annual life cycle events of organisms, such as reproduction and migration. Shifts in the timing of these events could have important population implications directly, or provide information about the mechanisms driving population trajectories, especially if they differ between life cycle event. We examine if such shifts occur in a declining migratory passerine bird (Willow Warbler, Phylloscopus trochilus), which exhibits latitudinally diverging population trajectories. We find evidence of phenological shifts in breeding initiation, breeding progression and moult that differ across geographic and spring temperature gradients. Moult initiation following warmer springs advances faster in the south than in the north, resulting in proportionally shorter breeding seasons, reflecting higher nest failure rates in the south and in warmer years. Tracking shifts in multiple life cycle events allowed us to identify points of failure in the breeding cycle in regions where the species has negative population trends, thereby demonstrating the utility of phenology analyses for illuminating mechanistic pathways underlying observed population trajectories.