| Literature DB >> 27547519 |
Luis M Carrascal1, Sara Villén-Pérez1,2, David Palomino3.
Abstract
Background. The availability of environmental energy, as measured by temperature, is expected to limit the abundance and distribution of endotherms wintering at temperate latitudes. A prediction of this hypothesis is that birds should attain their highest abundances in warmer areas. However, there may be a spatial mismatch between species preferred habitats and species preferred temperatures, so some species might end-up wintering in sub-optimal thermal environments. Methods. We model the influence of minimum winter temperature on the relative abundance of 106 terrestrial bird species wintering in peninsular Spain, at 10 ×10 km(2) resolution, using 95%-quantile regressions. We analyze general trends across species on the shape of the response curves, the environmental preferred temperature (at which the species abundance is maximized), the mean temperature in the area of distribution and the thermal breadth (area under the abundance-temperature curve). Results. Temperature explains a low proportion of variation in abundance. The most significant effect is on limiting the maximum potential abundance of species. Considering this upper-limit response, there is a large interspecific variability on the thermal preferences and specialization of species. Overall, there is a preponderance of positive relationships between species abundance and temperature; on average, species attain their maximum abundances in areas 1.9 °C warmer than the average temperature available in peninsular Spain. The mean temperature in the area of distribution is lower than the thermal preferences of the species. Discussion. Many species prefer the warmest areas to overwinter, which suggests that temperature imposes important restrictions to birds wintering in the Iberian Peninsula. However, one third of species overwinter in locations colder than their thermal preferences, probably reflecting the interaction between habitat and thermal requirements. There is a high inter-specific variation in the versatility of species using the available thermal space, and the limited effect of temperature highlights the role of other environmental factors determining species abundance.Entities:
Keywords: Bird abundance; Preferred temperature; Quantile regression; Species distribution; Thermal breadth; Winter
Year: 2016 PMID: 27547519 PMCID: PMC4957994 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Representation of environmental preferred temperature (TPREF), mean temperature (TMEAN) and thermal breadth (TBREATH) of an example specie.
(A) Abundance of Columba palumbus in relation to minimum winter temperature along 1,689 UTM cells, and fitting curves for quantile regression models (from top to bottom: models on 95th, 75th, 50th and 25th percentiles). Relative abundance is the number of 15 min transects over 60 in which the species is detected at each UTM 10 × 10 km2 cell. (B) TPREF, TMEAN and TBREATH of Columba palumbus. Environmental preferred temperature (TPREF) is the temperature at which the maximum abundance of the species is predicted by the quantile regression model for percentile 95th in (A). Mean temperature (TMEAN) is the mean winter minimum temperature in those UTM cells where the species was present, weighed by the relative abundance of the species at each cell. Thermal breadth (TBREATH) is the standardized area under the curve of quantile regression model for percentile 95th in (A), from −2 to 10 °C (shaded area in B).
Figure 2Minimum winter temperature (°C) and relative abundance of three example bird species in peninsular Spain, and relationship between these variables.
(A) Minimum winter temperatures in the study area (peninsular Spain). (B) Location of the study area (black) within the western Palearctic (dark grey). (C, E, G) Winter relative abundance of three sample species (Saxicola rubicola, Erithacus rubecula and Turdus viscivorus, respectively), at 1,689 UTM 10 × 10 km2 cells within the study area, sampled in three consecutive winters (2008–2011). Relative abundance is the frequency of occurrence in sixty 15-min linear transects carried out in each UTM cell. (D, F, H) Relationship between the relative abundance of these species and minimum winter temperature, as modeled by quadratic 95%-quantile regression models.
Parameters of the response of species abundance to winter temperature.
Figures are mean, standard deviation and range of parameters derived from 95%-quantile regression models describing the influence of minimum winter temperature on abundance of bird species wintering in peninsular Spain, sampled at 1,689 UTM 10 × 10 km2 cells in three consecutive winters (2008–2011). Sample size is 93 species when considering only significant models with a reduction in AIC figures (ΔAIC) lower than −13.82 units, and 103 species when significance of models is not relevant and therefore all species are considered. Detailed data for all species are shown in Table S1.
| Mean | sd | Range | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standardized linear coefficient, | 3.22 | 6.22 | −9.38/18.94 | 93 |
| Standardized curvilinear coefficient, | −1.43 | 4.39 | −18.12/7.54 | 93 |
| Environmental preferred temperature (°C), | 4.36 | 4.72 | −2/10 | 93 |
| Mean temperature on distribution areas (°C), | 2.75 | 1.10 | −0.2/5.5 | 103 |
| Thermal breadth, | 0.64 | 0.20 | 0.26/1 | 103 |
Notes.
b, c, linear and quadratic regression coefficients obtained from 95%-quantile regression models on the effect of minimum winter temperature on the relative abundance of species; TPREF, winter minimum temperature at which the relative abundance of the species is maximized; TMEAN, mean of average winter minimum temperature in those UTM cells where the species were present, weighed by the relative abundance of the specie at the cell; TBREADTH, area under the curve defined by the second order polynomial equation that relates the relative abundance of species to the temperature using the coefficients of the 95%-quantile regression models. n, number of species considered.
Figure 3Relationship between TPREF and TMEAN for 93 bird species wintering in peninsular Spain.
The graph shows 93 species for which the 95%-quantile regression models including the linear and quadratic terms of temperature attained AIC figures that were 13.82 units lower than those AIC figures obtained for 95%-quantile null regression models. Solid line represents the linear regression between TPREF and TMEAN.