The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching

Climate change has caused shifts in seasonally recurring biological events and the decoupling of consume-resource pairs in time – that is ‘mismatching’. Despite its theorized risks, empirical evidence for the fitness consequences of mismatching has been mixed and our understanding of when mismatchin...

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Main Authors: Wilde, Luke R., Simmonds, Josiah E., Swift, Rose J., Senner, Nathan R.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4298754
https://zenodo.org/record/4298754
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author Wilde, Luke R.
Simmonds, Josiah E.
Swift, Rose J.
Senner, Nathan R.
author_facet Wilde, Luke R.
Simmonds, Josiah E.
Swift, Rose J.
Senner, Nathan R.
author_sort Wilde, Luke R.
collection DataCite
description Climate change has caused shifts in seasonally recurring biological events and the decoupling of consume-resource pairs in time – that is ‘mismatching’. Despite its theorized risks, empirical evidence for the fitness consequences of mismatching has been mixed and our understanding of when mismatching matters for populations is still rudimentary. Studies typically categorize consumers as ‘matched’ or ‘mismatched’ from the synchrony between the timing of a single life-history event and peak resource availability. However, because resource availability and consumer demands vary throughout the interaction, the synchrony definition could obscure the cumulative effects of mismatching and mask population-level consequences. Clarifying the consequences of mismatching may therefore require a more robust and mechanistic definition of mismatching. We developed models to identify the effects of resource characteristics on individual- and population-level fitness and how these change throughout the consumer’s ontogeny. From these, we estimated the effects of resource characteristics on the growth, daily survival, and fledging rates of Hudsonian godwit chicks ( Limosa haemastica ) hatched near Beluga River, Alaska. Godwit chicks’ growth and survival improved following periods of higher invertebrate abundance but was increasingly dependent on the availability of larger prey as they aged. At the population, seasonal fledging rates were best explained by a model with accurate of estimates consumer demand throughout ontogeny. Our study suggests that quantifying the strength of selection from resource characteristics can capture the effects of mismatching at both the individual- and population-level. Additionally, we show that consumer ontogeny affects the consequences of the mismatch over the course of the interaction because of increasing demands. Prevailing evidence for variable responses to mismatching means that tools for monitoring extinction risks will be invaluable. Replacing the synchrony definition of mismatching may be a first key step to clarifying when mismatches affect consumer populations. : Code at https://github.com/luke-wilde/Anatomy-of-a-mismatch.git
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4298754 2025-01-16T21:15:27+00:00 The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching Wilde, Luke R. Simmonds, Josiah E. Swift, Rose J. Senner, Nathan R. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4298754 https://zenodo.org/record/4298754 en eng Zenodo https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.x69p8czh0 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4298755 Open Access Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode cc-by-4.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC-BY mismatch; climate change; Limosa haemastica; Bayesian hierarchical model; ontogeny Text Journal article article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4298754 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.x69p8czh0 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4298755 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Climate change has caused shifts in seasonally recurring biological events and the decoupling of consume-resource pairs in time – that is ‘mismatching’. Despite its theorized risks, empirical evidence for the fitness consequences of mismatching has been mixed and our understanding of when mismatching matters for populations is still rudimentary. Studies typically categorize consumers as ‘matched’ or ‘mismatched’ from the synchrony between the timing of a single life-history event and peak resource availability. However, because resource availability and consumer demands vary throughout the interaction, the synchrony definition could obscure the cumulative effects of mismatching and mask population-level consequences. Clarifying the consequences of mismatching may therefore require a more robust and mechanistic definition of mismatching. We developed models to identify the effects of resource characteristics on individual- and population-level fitness and how these change throughout the consumer’s ontogeny. From these, we estimated the effects of resource characteristics on the growth, daily survival, and fledging rates of Hudsonian godwit chicks ( Limosa haemastica ) hatched near Beluga River, Alaska. Godwit chicks’ growth and survival improved following periods of higher invertebrate abundance but was increasingly dependent on the availability of larger prey as they aged. At the population, seasonal fledging rates were best explained by a model with accurate of estimates consumer demand throughout ontogeny. Our study suggests that quantifying the strength of selection from resource characteristics can capture the effects of mismatching at both the individual- and population-level. Additionally, we show that consumer ontogeny affects the consequences of the mismatch over the course of the interaction because of increasing demands. Prevailing evidence for variable responses to mismatching means that tools for monitoring extinction risks will be invaluable. Replacing the synchrony definition of mismatching may be a first key step to clarifying when mismatches affect consumer populations. : Code at https://github.com/luke-wilde/Anatomy-of-a-mismatch.git Text Beluga Beluga* Alaska DataCite Luke ENVELOPE(-94.855,-94.855,56.296,56.296)
spellingShingle mismatch; climate change; Limosa haemastica; Bayesian hierarchical model; ontogeny
Wilde, Luke R.
Simmonds, Josiah E.
Swift, Rose J.
Senner, Nathan R.
The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
title The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
title_full The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
title_fullStr The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
title_full_unstemmed The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
title_short The anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
title_sort anatomy of a phenological mismatch: interacting consumer demand and resources characteristics determine the consequences of mismatching
topic mismatch; climate change; Limosa haemastica; Bayesian hierarchical model; ontogeny
topic_facet mismatch; climate change; Limosa haemastica; Bayesian hierarchical model; ontogeny
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4298754
https://zenodo.org/record/4298754