Data from: Global pattern of nest predation is disrupted by climate change in shorebirds

Ongoing climate change is thought to disrupt trophic relationships, with consequences for complex interspecific interactions, yet the effects of climate change on species interactions are poorly understood, and such effects have not been documented at a global scale. Using a single database of 38,19...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kubelka, Vojtěch, Šálek, Miroslav, Tomkovich, Pavel, Végvári, Zsolt, Freckleton, Robert P., Székely, Tamás
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.45g90h4.2
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.45g90h4.1
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.45g90h4
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Summary:Ongoing climate change is thought to disrupt trophic relationships, with consequences for complex interspecific interactions, yet the effects of climate change on species interactions are poorly understood, and such effects have not been documented at a global scale. Using a single database of 38,191 nests from 237 populations, we found that shorebirds have experienced a worldwide increase in nest predation over the past 70 years. Historically, there existed a latitudinal gradient in nest predation, with the highest rates in the tropics; however, this pattern has been recently reversed in the Northern Hemisphere, most notably in the Arctic. This increased nest predation is consistent with climate-induced shifts in predator-prey relationships. Data and R codes for Global pattern of nest predation is disrupted by climate change in shorebirdsAll data files (*26*) are in one zip folder (3 scripts, *21* dataset files, 1 file with phylogenetic trees, 1 file with all variables description). Choose one of the commented scripts (Models, Figures, SuppFigures) and run it. It will use all needed data.Kubelka et al. 2018_Global pattern of nest predation is disrupted by climate change in shorebirds_DATA for Dryad.zip