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Climate change,phenology, and habitat degradation: drivers of gosling body condition and juvenile survival in lesser snow geese
Authors:Lise M Aubry  Robert F Rockwell  Evan G Cooch  Rodney W Brook  Christa P H Mulder  David N Koons
Institution:1. Department of Wildland Resources and the Berryman Institute, Utah State University, , Logan, UT, 84322‐5230 USA;2. Division of Vertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, , New York, NY, 10024 USA;3. Department of Natural Resources, Fernow Hall, Cornell University, , Ithaca, NY, 14853 USA;4. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, , Peterborough, ON, K9J 7B8 Canada;5. Institute of Arctic Biology and Department of Biology & Wildlife, University of Alaska Fairbanks, , Fairbanks, AK, 99775 USA
Abstract:Nesting migratory geese are among the dominant herbivores in (sub) arctic environments, which have undergone unprecedented increases in temperatures and plant growing days over the last three decades. Within these regions, the Hudson Bay Lowlands are home to an overabundant breeding population of lesser snow geese that has dramatically damaged the ecosystem, with cascading effects at multiple trophic levels. In some areas the overabundance of geese has led to a drastic reduction in available forage. In addition, warming of this region has widened the gap between goose migration timing and plant green‐up, and this ‘mismatch’ between goose and plant phenologies could in turn affect gosling development. The dual effects of climate change and habitat quality on gosling body condition and juvenile survival are not known, but are critical for predicting population growth and related degradation of (sub) arctic ecosystems. To address these issues, we used information on female goslings marked and measured between 1978 and 2005 (4125 individuals). Goslings that developed within and near the traditional center of the breeding colony experienced the effects of long‐term habitat degradation: body condition and juvenile survival declined over time. In newly colonized areas, however, we observed the opposite pattern (increase in body condition and juvenile survival). In addition, warmer than average winters and summers resulted in lower gosling body condition and first‐year survival. Too few plant ‘growing days’ in the spring relative to hatch led to similar results. Our assessment indicates that geese are recovering from habitat degradation by moving to newly colonized locales. However, a warmer climate could negatively affect snow goose populations in the long‐run, but it will depend on which seasons warm the fastest. These antagonistic mechanisms will require further study to help predict snow goose population dynamics and manage the trophic cascade they induce.
Keywords:Arctic oscillation index  Burnham model  capture‐mark‐recapture     Chen caerulescens caerulescens     growing days  phenological mismatch  survival
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