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Variation and correlation in the timing of breeding of North Atlantic seabirds across multiple scales

Authors :
Keogan, Katharine
Daunt, Francis
Wanless, Sarah
Phillips, Richard A.
Alvarez, David
Anker‐Nilssen, Tycho
Barrett, Robert T.
Bech, Claus
Becker, Peter H.
Berglund, Per‐Arvid
Bouwhuis, Sandra
Burr, Zofia M.
Chastel, Olivier
Christensen‐Dalsgaard, Signe
Descamps, Sebastien
Diamond, Tony
Elliott, Kyle
Erikstad, Kjell‐Einar
Harris, Mike
Hentati‐Sundberg, Jonas
Heubeck, Martin
Kress, Stephen W.
Langset, Magdalene
Lorentsen, Svein‐Håkon
Major, Heather L.
Mallory, Mark
Mellor, Mick
Miles, Will T.S.
Moe, Børge
Mostello, Carolyn
Newell, Mark
Nisbet, Ian
Reiertsen, Tone Kirstin
Rock, Jennifer
Shannon, Paula
Varpe, Øystein
Lewis, Sue
Phillimore, Albert B.
Keogan, Katharine
Daunt, Francis
Wanless, Sarah
Phillips, Richard A.
Alvarez, David
Anker‐Nilssen, Tycho
Barrett, Robert T.
Bech, Claus
Becker, Peter H.
Berglund, Per‐Arvid
Bouwhuis, Sandra
Burr, Zofia M.
Chastel, Olivier
Christensen‐Dalsgaard, Signe
Descamps, Sebastien
Diamond, Tony
Elliott, Kyle
Erikstad, Kjell‐Einar
Harris, Mike
Hentati‐Sundberg, Jonas
Heubeck, Martin
Kress, Stephen W.
Langset, Magdalene
Lorentsen, Svein‐Håkon
Major, Heather L.
Mallory, Mark
Mellor, Mick
Miles, Will T.S.
Moe, Børge
Mostello, Carolyn
Newell, Mark
Nisbet, Ian
Reiertsen, Tone Kirstin
Rock, Jennifer
Shannon, Paula
Varpe, Øystein
Lewis, Sue
Phillimore, Albert B.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

1. Timing of breeding, an important driver of fitness in many populations, is widely studied in the context of global change, yet despite considerable efforts to identify environmental drivers of seabird nesting phenology, for most populations we lack evidence of strong drivers. Here we adopt an alternative approach, examining the degree to which different populations positively covary in their annual phenology to infer whether phenological responses to environmental drivers are likely to be (i) shared across species at a range of spatial scales, (ii) shared across populations of a species, or (iii) idiosyncratic to populations. 2. We combined 51 long-term datasets on breeding phenology spanning 50 years from nine seabird species across 29 North Atlantic sites and examined the extent to which different populations share early versus late breeding seasons depending on a hierarchy of spatial scales comprising breeding site, small-scale region, large-scale region and the whole North Atlantic. 3. In about a third of cases we found laying dates of populations of different species sharing the same breeding site or small-scale breeding region were positively correlated, which is consistent with the hypothesis that they share phenological responses to the same environmental conditions. In comparison we found no evidence for positive phenological covariation among populations across species aggregated at larger spatial scales. 4. In general we found little evidence for positive phenological covariation between populations of a single species, and in many instances the inter-year variation specific to a population was substantial, consistent with each population responding idiosyncratically to local environmental conditions. Black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) was the exception, with populations exhibiting positive covariation in laying dates that decayed with the distance between breeding sites, suggesting that populations may be responding to a similar driver. 5. Our

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363222980
Document Type :
Electronic Resource