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Dynamic size responses to climate change: prevailing effects of rising temperature drive long‐term body size increases in a semi‐arid passerine
Authors:Janet L. Gardner  Tatsuya Amano  Brendan G. Mackey  William J. Sutherland  Mark Clayton  Anne Peters
Affiliation:1. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, , Melbourne, Vic., 3168 Australia;2. Division of Evolution, Ecology and Genetics, The Australian National University, , Canberra, ACT, 0200 Australia;3. Conservation Science Group, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, , Cambridge, CB2 3EJ UK;4. Griffith Climate Change Response Program, Griffith University, , Gold Coast Campus, QLD, 4222 Australia;5. , Kaleen, ACT, 2617 Australia
Abstract:Changes in animal body size have been widely reported as a correlate of contemporary climate change. Body size affects metabolism and fitness, so changing size has implications for resilience, yet the climatic factors that drive size variation remain poorly understood. We test the role of mean and extreme temperature, rainfall, and remotely sensed primary productivity (NDVI) as drivers of body size in a sedentary, semi‐arid Australian passerine, Ptilotula (Lichenostomus) penicillatus, over 23 years. To distinguish effects due to differential growth from changes in population composition, we analysed first‐year birds and adults separately and considered climatic variation at three temporal scales (current, previous, and preceding 5 years). The strongest effects related to temperature: in both age classes, larger size was associated with warmer mean temperatures in the previous year, contrary to Bergmann's Rule. Moreover, adults were larger in warmer breeding seasons, while first years was larger after heatwaves; these effects are more likely to be mediated through size‐dependent mortality, highlighting the role of body size in determining vulnerability to extinction. In addition to temperature, larger adult size was associated with lower primary productivity, which may reflect a trade‐off between vegetative growth and nectar production, on which adults rely. Finally, lower rainfall was associated with decreasing size in first year and adults, most likely related to decreased food availability. Overall, body size increased over 23 years, strongly in first‐year birds (2.7%) compared with adults (1%), with size outcomes a balance between competing drivers. As rainfall declined over time and productivity remained fairly stable, the temporal increase in body size appears largely driven by rising mean temperature and temperature extremes. Body size responses to environmental change are thus complex and dynamic, driven by effects on growth as well as mortality.
Keywords:Bergmann's rule  body size  climate change  endotherm  microevolution  passerine  phenotypic plasticity  temperature extremes  white‐plumed honeyeater
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