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Recent changes in body weight and wing length among some British passerine birds

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Recent changes in body weight and wing length among some British passerine birds. / Yom-Tov, Y ; Yom-Tov, S ; Wright, J et al.
In: Oikos, Vol. 112, No. 1, 01.2006, p. 91-101.

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Yom-Tov Y, Yom-Tov S, Wright J, Thorne CJR, Du Feu R. Recent changes in body weight and wing length among some British passerine birds. Oikos. 2006 Jan;112(1):91-101. doi: 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2006.14183.x

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Yom-Tov, Y ; Yom-Tov, S ; Wright, J et al. / Recent changes in body weight and wing length among some British passerine birds. In: Oikos. 2006 ; Vol. 112, No. 1. pp. 91-101.

Bibtex

@article{2d36312a82d84a0e9dd083f9752b7606,
title = "Recent changes in body weight and wing length among some British passerine birds",
abstract = "We tested the prediction that global warming has caused recent decreases in body weight (Bergmann's rule) and increases in wing length (Allen's rule) in 14 species of passerine birds at two localities in England: Wicken Fen (1968-2003) and Treswell Wood (1973-2003).Predicted long-term linear decreases in residual body weight occurred in four species: dunnocks (Wicken Fen), and great tits, blue tits and bullfinches (Treswell Wood). Non-linear decreases also occurred in reed warblers and blackcaps at Wicken Fen, which also had a surprising linear increase in residual body weight in blackbirds.Residual wing lengths increased linearly, as predicted, in six of seven species at Wicken Fen. Whereas there were non-linear long-term increases in wrens, dunnocks and blackbirds in Treswell Wood. Unexpected linear decreases also occurred in residual wing lengths in willow warblers (Wicken Fen), and blue tits, great tits and chaffinches (Treswell Wood).The most parsimonious explanation for such long-term changes in body weight is global warming, as predicted by Bergmann's rule. Greater site and species-specific effects on wing length (e.g. non-linear changes plus shorter wings in the woodland habitat) suggest a less straightforward conclusion concerning Allen's rule, probably because wing length involved variation in both bone and feather growth.Changes in residual body weights and wing lengths often differed between species and were sometimes non-linear, perhaps reflecting short-term modifications in selection pressures. Human-induced influences are discussed, such as avian predator population densities and land-use change. Short-term variation in temperature had little effect, but rainfall did explain the unusual increase in blackbird body weight, possibly as a result of improving food (earthworm) availability.",
keywords = "TIT PARUS-MAJOR, CLIMATE-CHANGE, HOUSE SPARROW, NEW-ZEALAND, SIZE, POPULATIONS, EVOLUTION, DIFFERENTIATION, CONSEQUENCES, TEMPERATURE",
author = "Y Yom-Tov and S Yom-Tov and J Wright and Thorne, {C J R} and {Du Feu}, R",
year = "2006",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1111/j.0030-1299.2006.14183.x",
language = "English",
volume = "112",
pages = "91--101",
journal = "Oikos",
issn = "0030-1299",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Recent changes in body weight and wing length among some British passerine birds

AU - Yom-Tov, Y

AU - Yom-Tov, S

AU - Wright, J

AU - Thorne, C J R

AU - Du Feu, R

PY - 2006/1

Y1 - 2006/1

N2 - We tested the prediction that global warming has caused recent decreases in body weight (Bergmann's rule) and increases in wing length (Allen's rule) in 14 species of passerine birds at two localities in England: Wicken Fen (1968-2003) and Treswell Wood (1973-2003).Predicted long-term linear decreases in residual body weight occurred in four species: dunnocks (Wicken Fen), and great tits, blue tits and bullfinches (Treswell Wood). Non-linear decreases also occurred in reed warblers and blackcaps at Wicken Fen, which also had a surprising linear increase in residual body weight in blackbirds.Residual wing lengths increased linearly, as predicted, in six of seven species at Wicken Fen. Whereas there were non-linear long-term increases in wrens, dunnocks and blackbirds in Treswell Wood. Unexpected linear decreases also occurred in residual wing lengths in willow warblers (Wicken Fen), and blue tits, great tits and chaffinches (Treswell Wood).The most parsimonious explanation for such long-term changes in body weight is global warming, as predicted by Bergmann's rule. Greater site and species-specific effects on wing length (e.g. non-linear changes plus shorter wings in the woodland habitat) suggest a less straightforward conclusion concerning Allen's rule, probably because wing length involved variation in both bone and feather growth.Changes in residual body weights and wing lengths often differed between species and were sometimes non-linear, perhaps reflecting short-term modifications in selection pressures. Human-induced influences are discussed, such as avian predator population densities and land-use change. Short-term variation in temperature had little effect, but rainfall did explain the unusual increase in blackbird body weight, possibly as a result of improving food (earthworm) availability.

AB - We tested the prediction that global warming has caused recent decreases in body weight (Bergmann's rule) and increases in wing length (Allen's rule) in 14 species of passerine birds at two localities in England: Wicken Fen (1968-2003) and Treswell Wood (1973-2003).Predicted long-term linear decreases in residual body weight occurred in four species: dunnocks (Wicken Fen), and great tits, blue tits and bullfinches (Treswell Wood). Non-linear decreases also occurred in reed warblers and blackcaps at Wicken Fen, which also had a surprising linear increase in residual body weight in blackbirds.Residual wing lengths increased linearly, as predicted, in six of seven species at Wicken Fen. Whereas there were non-linear long-term increases in wrens, dunnocks and blackbirds in Treswell Wood. Unexpected linear decreases also occurred in residual wing lengths in willow warblers (Wicken Fen), and blue tits, great tits and chaffinches (Treswell Wood).The most parsimonious explanation for such long-term changes in body weight is global warming, as predicted by Bergmann's rule. Greater site and species-specific effects on wing length (e.g. non-linear changes plus shorter wings in the woodland habitat) suggest a less straightforward conclusion concerning Allen's rule, probably because wing length involved variation in both bone and feather growth.Changes in residual body weights and wing lengths often differed between species and were sometimes non-linear, perhaps reflecting short-term modifications in selection pressures. Human-induced influences are discussed, such as avian predator population densities and land-use change. Short-term variation in temperature had little effect, but rainfall did explain the unusual increase in blackbird body weight, possibly as a result of improving food (earthworm) availability.

KW - TIT PARUS-MAJOR

KW - CLIMATE-CHANGE

KW - HOUSE SPARROW

KW - NEW-ZEALAND

KW - SIZE

KW - POPULATIONS

KW - EVOLUTION

KW - DIFFERENTIATION

KW - CONSEQUENCES

KW - TEMPERATURE

U2 - 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2006.14183.x

DO - 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2006.14183.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 112

SP - 91

EP - 101

JO - Oikos

JF - Oikos

SN - 0030-1299

IS - 1

ER -