Species-specific traits mediate avian demographic responses under past climate change

被引:0
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作者
Ryan R. Germain
Shaohong Feng
Guangji Chen
Gary R. Graves
Joseph A. Tobias
Carsten Rahbek
Fumin Lei
Jon Fjeldså
Peter A. Hosner
M. Thomas P. Gilbert
Guojie Zhang
David Nogués-Bravo
机构
[1] University of Copenhagen,Center for Macroecology, Evolution, and Climate, The Globe Institute
[2] University of Copenhagen,Villum Centre for Biodiversity Genomics, Section for Ecology and Evolution, Department of Biology
[3] Zhejiang University School of Medicine,Center for Evolutionary and Organismal Biology
[4] Zhejiang University Medical Center,Liangzhu Laboratory
[5] Zhejiang University School of Medicine,Department of General Surgery of Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital
[6] Zhejiang University,Innovation Center of Yangtze River Delta
[7] BGI Shenzhen,College of Life Sciences
[8] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,Department of Vertebrate Zoology
[9] National Museum of Natural History,Department of Life Sciences
[10] Smithsonian Institution,Center for Global Mountain Biodiversity, The Globe Institute
[11] Imperial College London,Danish Institute for Advanced Study
[12] University of Copenhagen,Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology
[13] University of Southern Denmark,Natural History Museum of Denmark
[14] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics, The Globe Institute
[15] University of Copenhagen,Department of Natural History
[16] University of Copenhagen,State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology
[17] University Museum,undefined
[18] Norwegian University of Science and Technology,undefined
[19] Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
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摘要
Anticipating species’ responses to environmental change is a pressing mission in biodiversity conservation. Despite decades of research investigating how climate change may affect population sizes, historical context is lacking, and the traits that mediate demographic sensitivity to changing climate remain elusive. We use whole-genome sequence data to reconstruct the demographic histories of 263 bird species over the past million years and identify networks of interacting morphological and life history traits associated with changes in effective population size (Ne) in response to climate warming and cooling. Our results identify direct and indirect effects of key traits representing dispersal, reproduction and survival on long-term demographic responses to climate change, thereby highlighting traits most likely to influence population responses to ongoing climate warming.
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页码:862 / 872
页数:10
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