4.7 Article

Australian songbird body size tracks climate variation: 82 species over 50 years

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2019.2258

关键词

climate change; body size; Bergmann's Rule; metabolism; starvation risk; heat exchange

资金

  1. Australian Research Council [DP120102651, FT150100139, FT180100354]
  2. Arcadia
  3. Australian Research Council [FT150100139, FT180100354] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The observed variation in the body size responses of endotherms to climate change may be explained by two hypotheses: the size increases with climate variability (the starvation resistance hypothesis) and the size shrinks as mean temperatures rise (the heat exchange hypothesis). Across 82 Australian passerine species over 50 years, shrinking was associated with annual mean temperature rise exceeding 0.012 degrees C driven by rising winter temperatures for arid and temperate zone species. We propose the warming winters hypothesis to explain this response. However, where average summer temperatures exceeded 34 degrees C, species experiencing annual rise over 0.0116 degrees C tended towards increasing size. Results suggest a broad-scale physiological response to changing climate, with size trends probably reflecting the relative strength of selection pressures across a climatic regime. Critically, a given amount of temperature change will have varying effects on phenotype depending on the season in which it occurs, masking the generality of size patterns associated with temperature change. Rather than phenotypic plasticity, and assuming body size is heritable, results suggest selective loss or gain of particular phenotypes could generate evolutionary change but may be difficult to detect with current warming rates.

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