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Abstract(s)
Reproductive timing in many taxa plays a key role in determining
breeding productivity1, and is often sensitive to climatic conditions2.
Current climate change may alter the timing of breeding
at different rates across trophic levels, potentially resulting in
temporal mismatch between the resource requirements of predators
and their prey3. This is of particular concern for highertrophic-
level organisms, whose longer generation times confer
a lower rate of evolutionary rescue than primary producers or
consumers4. However, the disconnection between studies of
ecological change in marine systems makes it difficult to detect
general changes in the timing of reproduction5. Here, we use a
comprehensive meta-analysis of 209 phenological time series
from 145 breeding populations to show that, on average, seabird
populations worldwide have not adjusted their breeding seasons
over time (− 0.020 days yr−1) or in response to sea surface
temperature (SST) (− 0.272 days °C−1) between 1952 and 2015.
However, marked between-year variation in timing observed in
resident species and some Pelecaniformes and Suliformes (cormorants,
gannets and boobies) may imply that timing, in some
cases, is affected by unmeasured environmental conditions. This
limited temperature-mediated plasticity of reproductive timing
in seabirds potentially makes these top predators highly vulnerable
to future mismatch with lower-trophic-level resources.
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Citation
Nature Publishing Group, 8(4), 313-318. Doi: 10.1038/s41558-018-0115-z
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group