Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change

Research output: Working paperPreprintResearch

Standard

Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change. / Germain, Ryan R.; Feng, Shaohong; Chen, Guangji; Graves, Gary R.; Tobias, Joseph A.; Rahbek, Carsten; Lei, Fumin; Fjeldså, Jon; Hosner, Peter A.; Gilbert, M. Thomas P.; KU, thw266; Nogués-Bravo, David.

bioRxiv, 2022.

Research output: Working paperPreprintResearch

Harvard

Germain, RR, Feng, S, Chen, G, Graves, GR, Tobias, JA, Rahbek, C, Lei, F, Fjeldså, J, Hosner, PA, Gilbert, MTP, KU, T & Nogués-Bravo, D 2022 'Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change' bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.08.16.504093

APA

Germain, R. R., Feng, S., Chen, G., Graves, G. R., Tobias, J. A., Rahbek, C., Lei, F., Fjeldså, J., Hosner, P. A., Gilbert, M. T. P., KU, T., & Nogués-Bravo, D. (2022). Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.08.16.504093

Vancouver

Germain RR, Feng S, Chen G, Graves GR, Tobias JA, Rahbek C et al. Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change. bioRxiv. 2022. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.08.16.504093

Author

Germain, Ryan R. ; Feng, Shaohong ; Chen, Guangji ; Graves, Gary R. ; Tobias, Joseph A. ; Rahbek, Carsten ; Lei, Fumin ; Fjeldså, Jon ; Hosner, Peter A. ; Gilbert, M. Thomas P. ; KU, thw266 ; Nogués-Bravo, David. / Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change. bioRxiv, 2022.

Bibtex

@techreport{f85dd13435d44c25813927d0ba8ad044,
title = "Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change",
abstract = "Anticipating species{\textquoteright} responses to environmental change is a pressing mission in biodiversity conservation. Despite decades of research investigating how climate change may affect population sizes, historical context is lacking and the traits which mediate demographic sensitivity to changing climate remain elusive. We use whole-genome sequence data to reconstruct the demographic histories of 263 bird species over the past one million years and identify networks of interacting morphological and life-history traits associated with changes in effective population size (Ne) in response to climate warming and cooling. Our results identify direct and indirect effects of key traits representing survival, reproduction, and dispersal processes on long-term demographic responses to climate change and highlight traits most likely to influence population responses to on-going climate warming.",
author = "Germain, {Ryan R.} and Shaohong Feng and Guangji Chen and Graves, {Gary R.} and Tobias, {Joseph A.} and Carsten Rahbek and Fumin Lei and Jon Fjelds{\aa} and Hosner, {Peter A.} and Gilbert, {M. Thomas P.} and thw266 KU and David Nogu{\'e}s-Bravo",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1101/2022.08.16.504093",
language = "English",
publisher = "bioRxiv",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "bioRxiv",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change

AU - Germain, Ryan R.

AU - Feng, Shaohong

AU - Chen, Guangji

AU - Graves, Gary R.

AU - Tobias, Joseph A.

AU - Rahbek, Carsten

AU - Lei, Fumin

AU - Fjeldså, Jon

AU - Hosner, Peter A.

AU - Gilbert, M. Thomas P.

AU - KU, thw266

AU - Nogués-Bravo, David

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Anticipating species’ responses to environmental change is a pressing mission in biodiversity conservation. Despite decades of research investigating how climate change may affect population sizes, historical context is lacking and the traits which mediate demographic sensitivity to changing climate remain elusive. We use whole-genome sequence data to reconstruct the demographic histories of 263 bird species over the past one million years and identify networks of interacting morphological and life-history traits associated with changes in effective population size (Ne) in response to climate warming and cooling. Our results identify direct and indirect effects of key traits representing survival, reproduction, and dispersal processes on long-term demographic responses to climate change and highlight traits most likely to influence population responses to on-going climate warming.

AB - Anticipating species’ responses to environmental change is a pressing mission in biodiversity conservation. Despite decades of research investigating how climate change may affect population sizes, historical context is lacking and the traits which mediate demographic sensitivity to changing climate remain elusive. We use whole-genome sequence data to reconstruct the demographic histories of 263 bird species over the past one million years and identify networks of interacting morphological and life-history traits associated with changes in effective population size (Ne) in response to climate warming and cooling. Our results identify direct and indirect effects of key traits representing survival, reproduction, and dispersal processes on long-term demographic responses to climate change and highlight traits most likely to influence population responses to on-going climate warming.

U2 - 10.1101/2022.08.16.504093

DO - 10.1101/2022.08.16.504093

M3 - Preprint

BT - Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change

PB - bioRxiv

ER -

ID: 334016635