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. 2009 Nov 7;276(1674):3845-52.
doi: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1011. Epub 2009 Aug 12.

Shifting latitudinal clines in avian body size correlate with global warming in Australian passerines

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Shifting latitudinal clines in avian body size correlate with global warming in Australian passerines

Janet L Gardner et al. Proc Biol Sci. .

Abstract

Intraspecific latitudinal clines in the body size of terrestrial vertebrates, where members of the same species are larger at higher latitudes, are widely interpreted as evidence for natural selection and adaptation to local climate. These clines are predicted to shift in response to climate change. We used museum specimens to measure changes in the body size of eight passerine bird species from south-eastern Australia over approximately the last 100 years. Four species showed significant decreases in body size (1.8-3.6% of wing length) and a shift in latitudinal cline over that period, and a meta-analysis demonstrated a consistent trend across all eight species. Southern high-latitude populations now display the body sizes typical of more northern populations pre-1950, equivalent to a 7 degrees shift in latitude. Using ptilochronology, we found no evidence that these morphological changes were a plastic response to changes in nutrition, a likely non-genetic mechanism for the pattern observed. Our results demonstrate a generalized response by eight avian species to some major environmental change over the last 100 years or so, probably global warming.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Change in latitudinal patterns of body size (wing length) for eight species between the late 1800s and 1950 (open circles), and between 1950 and 2001 (filled circles). (a) Grey-crowned babbler; (b) jacky winter; (c) hooded robin; (d) brown treecreeper; (e) white-browed scrubwren; (f) variegated fairy-wren; (g) yellow-rumped thornbill; (h) speckled warbler. Linear regressions examined association between body size and latitude, with a significant effect of latitude for four species (jacky winter, hooded robin, brown treecreeper, white-browed scrubwren) and a non-significant trend for one (grey-crowned babbler). Solid and dashed lines represent regression model predictions for wing length before 1950 and after 1950, respectively; the single line for white-browed scrubwren represents all data (no year effect). See table 2 for statistics.

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