Studies of ecological demography and the impact of climate change across latitudes

Temperatures are increasing throughout the world, but these increases are much less pronounced in tropical than in arctic regions and it has often been assumed that the ecological effects of climate change will therefore be smaller in the tropics. In ectotherms, however, there is evidence that tempe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Li, Teng, 李藤
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10722/227938
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Summary:Temperatures are increasing throughout the world, but these increases are much less pronounced in tropical than in arctic regions and it has often been assumed that the ecological effects of climate change will therefore be smaller in the tropics. In ectotherms, however, there is evidence that temperatures in the cooler regions may still be too cold and that physiological performance might actually increase if the climate there warms - temperatures in the tropics are already too hot so rising temperatures there may actually have a more negative effect. In this thesis, I test whether these principles may apply more generally to endotherms and not just in the case of ectotherms. I focus not on physiological indicators of performance but on the relationship between temperature and fitness itself. By drawing together published studies from across the world, I show that even in endothermic birds, conditions are often too cold in the mid- and higher latitudes where much of the world’s research effort has so far been focused, with significantly more studies finding an increase rather than a decrease in vital rates as temperatures there rise. In order to compare the impact of arctic and tropical climate change in a single population, I examine migratory species which are exposed to both latitudes in the course of their annual cycles. I develop the analytical methods needed to reconstruct the relationships between fitness and temperature at different latitudes. These methods involve modelling any effect which temperature might also have on our chances of detecting the birds, so I can distinguish ‘detection probability effects’ from genuine effects on population growth. Using the signal of arctic weather in time-series of population growth rates, my methods allow me to estimate the summer breeding locations of populations counted in the Tropics in winter. By applying these methods to the Grey Plover Pluvialis squatarola, which winters in Hong Kong and breeds in summer in the western Russian Arctic, I show that ...