Litcius/Paper detail

Shorebirds Are Shrinking and Shape‐Shifting: Declining Body Size and Lengthening Bills in the Past Half‐Century

Alexandra McQueen, Marcel Klaassen, Glenn J. Tattersall, Sara Ryding, Victorian Wader Study Group, Australasian Wader Studies Group, R. Atkinson, Rosalind Jessop, Chris J. Hassell, MacDonald J. Christie, Arkadiusz Fröhlich, Matthew R. E. Symonds

2024Ecology Letters16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Animals are predicted to shrink and shape-shift as the climate warms, declining in size, while their appendages lengthen. Determining which types of species are undergoing these morphological changes, and why, is critical to understanding species responses to global change, including potential adaptation to climate warming. We examine body size and bill length changes in 25 shorebird species using extensive field data (> 200,000 observations) collected over 46 years (1975-2021) by community scientists. We show widespread body size declines over time, and after short-term exposure to warmer summers. Meanwhile, shorebird bills are lengthening over time but shorten after hot summers. Shrinking and shape-shifting patterns are consistent across ecologically diverse shorebirds from tropical and temperate Australia, are more pronounced in smaller species and vary according to migration behaviour. These widespread morphological changes could be explained by multiple drivers, including adaptive and maladaptive responses to nutritional stress, or by thermal adaptation to climate warming.

Topics & Concepts

EcologyBergmann's ruleGeographyBiologyGeodesyLatitudeAvian ecology and behaviorGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestockEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies