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      Combined analysis of roadside and off-road breeding bird survey data to assess population change in Alaska

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      The Condor
      Cooper Ornithological Society

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          Inference from Iterative Simulation Using Multiple Sequences

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            Birds extend their ranges northwards

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              Birds are tracking climate warming, but not fast enough.

              Range shifts of many species are now documented as a response to global warming. But whether these observed changes are occurring fast enough remains uncertain and hardly quantifiable. Here, we developed a simple framework to measure change in community composition in response to climate warming. This framework is based on a community temperature index (CTI) that directly reflects, for a given species assemblage, the balance between low- and high-temperature dwelling species. Using data from the French breeding bird survey, we first found a strong increase in CTI over the last two decades revealing that birds are rapidly tracking climate warming. This increase corresponds to a 91 km northward shift in bird community composition, which is much higher than previous estimates based on changes in species range edges. During the same period, temperature increase corresponds to a 273 km northward shift in temperature. Change in community composition was thus insufficient to keep up with temperature increase: birds are lagging approximately 182 km behind climate warming. Our method is applicable to any taxa with large-scale survey data, using either abundance or occurrence data. This approach can be further used to test whether different delays are found across groups or in different land-use contexts.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Condor
                The Condor
                Cooper Ornithological Society
                0010-5422
                1938-5129
                August 2017
                August 2017
                : 119
                : 3
                : 557-575
                Article
                10.1650/CONDOR-17-67.1
                ece8effa-44be-4c27-b87d-931624834421
                © 2017

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