2019
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221999
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Feeling the heat: Elevated temperature affects male display activity of a lekking grassland bird

Abstract: Most species-climate models relate range margins to long-term mean climate but lack mechanistic understanding of the ecological or demographic processes underlying the climate response. We examined the case of a climatically limited edge-of-range population of a medium-sized grassland bird, for which climate responses may involve a behavioural trade-off between temperature stress and reproduction. We hypothesised that temperature will be a limiting factor for the conspicuous, male snort-call display behaviour,… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…The decline of the little bustard in Alentejo is probably not only a result of pressures occurring during the breeding season. In fact, multiple threats, such as loss of post-breeding and wintering areas, high anthropogenic mortality and global warming 40 , 67 , 68 , may be acting synergistically. Little bustards are short-distance migrants 69 , 70 that move towards more productive agriculture areas in northern, coastal or higher-altitude locations in Iberia during the dry summer season, in search of green vegetation 69 , 71 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The decline of the little bustard in Alentejo is probably not only a result of pressures occurring during the breeding season. In fact, multiple threats, such as loss of post-breeding and wintering areas, high anthropogenic mortality and global warming 40 , 67 , 68 , may be acting synergistically. Little bustards are short-distance migrants 69 , 70 that move towards more productive agriculture areas in northern, coastal or higher-altitude locations in Iberia during the dry summer season, in search of green vegetation 69 , 71 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The timing of their movements may not be driven by food availability, but instead by foraging restrictions. For example, in arid climates, some birds reduce their activity during midday as a means of behavioral thermoregulation (Silva et al 2015, Gudka et al 2019). Likewise, visually orienting species are limited by the availability of light.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lower costs, energy consumption, and required storing capacity of accelerometers (Brown et al, 2013; Hughey et al, 2018; Korpela et al, 2020) result in lower weight and smaller‐sized devices with extended logging durations (several days or weeks; Brown et al, 2013). Nonetheless, further investigation of the use of accelerometers in the study of vocal communication has received limited attention (Naito et al, 2010; Oestreich et al, 2020; Saddler et al, 2017; Stimpert et al, 2020; Wijers et al, 2020) and has—to the best of our knowledge—only been applied in two species of bustards which perform booming calls, associated with excessive head movements (little bustards Tetrax , Gudka et al, 2019; African houbara bustards Chlamydotis undulata , Alonso et al, 2021). The limited adoption of accelerometers in vocal studies is possibly due to the difficulty of assigning accelerometer data to different behaviors in free‐roaming animals (Alonso et al, 2021; Brown et al, 2013; Nathan et al, 2012; Shamoun‐Baranes et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%