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Decadal declines in avian herbivore reproduction: density-dependent nutrition and phenological mismatch in the Arctic.

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TLDR
It is suggested that both increased phenological mismatch and reduced nutritional condition of arriving females were behind declines in population-level recruitment, leading to the recent attenuation in population growth of Snow Geese.
Abstract
A full understanding of population dynamics depends not only on estimation of mechanistic contributions of recruitment and survival, but also knowledge about the ecological processes that drive each of these vital rates. The process of recruitment in particular may be protracted over several years, and can depend on numerous ecological complexities until sexually mature adulthood is attained. We addressed long-term declines (23 breeding seasons, 1992-2014) in the per capita production of young by both Ross's Geese (Chen rossii) and Lesser Snow Geese (Chen caerulescens caerulescens) nesting at Karrak Lake in Canada's central Arctic. During this period, there was a contemporaneous increase from 0.4 to 1.1 million adults nesting at this colony. We evaluated whether (1) density-dependent nutritional deficiencies of pre-breeding females or (2) phenological mismatch between peak gosling hatch and peak forage quality, inferred from NDVI on the brood-rearing areas, may have been behind decadal declines in the per capita production of goslings. We found that, in years when pre-breeding females arrived to the nesting grounds with diminished nutrient reserves, the proportional composition of young during brood-rearing was reduced for both species. Furthermore, increased mismatch between peak gosling hatch and peak forage quality contributed additively to further declines in gosling production, in addition to declines caused by delayed nesting with associated subsequent negative effects on clutch size and nest success. The degree of mismatch increased over the course of our study because of advanced vegetation phenology without a corresponding advance in Goose nesting phenology. Vegetation phenology was significantly earlier in years with warm surface air temperatures measured in spring (i.e., 25 May-30 June). We suggest that both increased phenological mismatch and reduced nutritional condition of arriving females were behind declines in population-level recruitment, leading to the recent attenuation in population growth of Snow Geese.

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Climate Change and Phenological Mismatch in Trophic Interactions Among Plants, Insects, and Vertebrates

TL;DR: This work reviews whether this continuously ongoing phenomenon, also known as trophic asynchrony, is becoming more common under ongoing rapid climate change, and investigates limited evidence of phenological mismatch in mutualistic interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global shifts in the phenological synchrony of species interactions over recent decades.

TL;DR: The findings show that there have been shifts in the timing of interacting species in recent decades; the next challenges are to improve the ability to predict the direction of change and understand the full consequences for communities and ecosystems.
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Evolutionary and demographic consequences of phenological mismatches.

TL;DR: This review puts the research on phenological mismatches into a conceptual framework, applies this framework beyond consumer–resource interactions and illustrates this framework using examples drawn from the vast body of literature on mismatches.
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Integrated population models facilitate ecological understanding and improved management decisions

TL;DR: Integrated population models (IPMs) represent a formal statistical methodology for combining multiple data sets such as population counts, band recoveries, and fecundity estimates into a single unified analysis with dual objectives: better estimating population size, trajectory, and vital rates; and formally describing the ecological processes that generated these patterns as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information-Theoretic Approach

TL;DR: The second edition of this book is unique in that it focuses on methods for making formal statistical inference from all the models in an a priori set (Multi-Model Inference).
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Ecological responses to recent climate change.

TL;DR: A review of the ecological impacts of recent climate change exposes a coherent pattern of ecological change across systems, from polar terrestrial to tropical marine environments.
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Decadal Trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation: Regional Temperatures and Precipitation

TL;DR: An evaluation of the atmospheric moisture budget reveals coherent large-scale changes since 1980 that are linked to recent dry conditions over southern Europe and the Mediterranean, whereas northern Europe and parts of Scandinavia have generally experienced wetter than normal conditions.
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Annular Modes in the Extratropical Circulation. Part I: Month-to-Month Variability*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the structure and seasonality of the Southern Hemisphere (SH) annular mode and the Northern Hemisphere (NH) mode, referred to as the Arctic Oscillation (AO), based on data from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction and National Center for Atmospheric Research reanalysis and supplementary datasets.
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