Demand-Resource Mismatch Explains Body Shrinkage in a Migratory Shorebird
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| Publication date | 04-2025 |
| Journal | Global Change Biology |
| Article number | e70170 |
| Volume | Issue number | 31 | 4 |
| Number of pages | 14 |
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| Abstract |
Recent observations of body size declines in animal populations have
given rise to discussions of whether or not this is related to climate
change-induced temperature increases, with which the body size changes
would follow Bergmann's rule. Although the debate is ongoing, the
limited thermal benefits of currently observed size reductions make it
unlikely that temperature increase shapes a direct selection pressure.
Food constraints during early-life development, which could be caused by
mismatches between available resources and energetic demands, could
cause smaller body sizes too. Here we investigate whether a decrease in
body size, observed in a migratory shorebird, the red knot (Calidris canutus canutus)
at their West-African nonbreeding grounds over two decades, is linked
to developmental plasticity during chick growth in the High Arctic. To
do so, we combined datasets from both the wintering and breeding grounds
on body size measurements (during chick growth and in fully grown
juveniles), food availability, and diet inferred from stable isotopes
deposited in feathers grown as chicks. From 2003 to 2021, stable-isotope
ratios revealed a decline in the dietary contribution of crane flies
(Tipulidae, Diptera), the key food of growing chicks in the Arctic. On
the breeding grounds, we observed that while the emergence of adult
crane flies advanced along with earlier snowmelt dates, red knots did
not adjust the timing of breeding, and this resulted in an increasing
mismatch with the demands of growing chicks. As a result, chicks grew
slower and, as observed on the wintering grounds, reached smaller final
body sizes. Our results imply that increasing resource-demand mismatches
may lead to body shrinkage via plasticity during development. In this
study, the increasing mismatch was linked with climate warming; the
presented causal chain may explain other recent examples of body size
reductions as well.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70170 |
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