Spatially heterogeneous shifts in vegetation phenology induced by climate change threaten the integrity of the avian migration network

Author:

Wei Jie1ORCID,Xu Fei2ORCID,Cole Ella F.3ORCID,Sheldon Ben C.3ORCID,de Boer Willem F.4ORCID,Wielstra Ben56ORCID,Fu Haohuan1ORCID,Gong Peng17ORCID,Si Yali18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Ecological Field Station for East Asian Migratory Birds, Department of Earth System Science Tsinghua University Beijing China

2. Key Laboratory of the Three Gorges Reservoir Region's Eco‐Environment, Ministry of Education Chongqing University Chongqing China

3. Edward Grey Institute, Department of Biology University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Group Wageningen University and Research Wageningen the Netherlands

5. Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University Leiden the Netherlands

6. Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden the Netherlands

7. Department of Geography, Department of Earth Sciences Institute for Climate and Carbon Neutrality, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong China

8. Institute of Environmental Sciences, Leiden University Leiden the Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractPhenological responses to climate change frequently vary among trophic levels, which can result in increasing asynchrony between the peak energy requirements of consumers and the availability of resources. Migratory birds use multiple habitats with seasonal food resources along migration flyways. Spatially heterogeneous climate change could cause the phenology of food availability along the migration flyway to become desynchronized. Such heterogeneous shifts in food phenology could pose a challenge to migratory birds by reducing their opportunity for food availability along the migration path and consequently influencing their survival and reproduction. We develop a novel graph‐based approach to quantify this problem and deploy it to evaluate the condition of the heterogeneous shifts in vegetation phenology for 16 migratory herbivorous waterfowl species in Asia. We show that climate change‐induced heterogeneous shifts in vegetation phenology could cause a 12% loss of migration network integrity on average across all study species. Species that winter at relatively lower latitudes are subjected to a higher loss of integrity in their migration network. These findings highlight the susceptibility of migratory species to climate change. Our proposed methodological framework could be applied to migratory species in general to yield an accurate assessment of the exposure under climate change and help to identify actions for biodiversity conservation in the face of climate‐related risks.

Funder

China Scholarship Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Reference70 articles.

1. BirdLife International. (2022).IUCN Red List for birds.http://www.birdlife.org

2. BirdLife International and NatureServe. (2020).Bird species distribution maps of the world version 5.0.http://datazone.birdlife.org/species/requestdis

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