Publication: Fall Advances in the Timing of Molt in Birds in the Southwestern United States
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Kittelberger, Kyle D.
Neate-Clegg, Montague H. C.
Sekercioglu, cagan Hakki
Publication Date
Language
Type
Embargo Status
No
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Abstract
Molt is a critical event in the annual cycle of birds. Although we know an increasing amount about the impacts of climate change on the timing of other avian events, there has been relatively limited work conducted on changes in molt phenology over time. In this study, we utilized a 13-year bird-banding dataset from southeastern Utah to examine long-term trends in the molt timing of body and flight feathers during both the spring and the fall migratory seasons, accounting for temporal trends in nonmolting birds and how trends may vary between different sexes and ages of birds. We found that there were no significant temporal trends in molt timing in the spring but there were significant trends in the fall, such that birds were advancing the timing of their body and flight feather molt over time. Finally, we highlight the significant influence of climate on molt phenology: El Ni & ntilde;o/Southern Oscillation and maximum temperature were both associated with advances in spring body molt, maximum temperature was associated with delays in fall flight feather molt timing, and precipitation was associated with advances in both fall body and flight feather molt timing. This study provides the first examination of long-term trends in the molt phenology of North American birds, showing that over the past decade, birds in the western United States have advanced their feather molt timing in the fall at a rate of roughly one day/year.
Source
Publisher
Univ Chicago Press
Subject
Ecology, Evolutionary Biology
Citation
Has Part
Source
American naturalist
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1086/735848
