TY - JOUR
T1 - Different currencies for calculating resource phenology result in opposite inferences about trophic mismatches
AU - Versluijs, Tom S.L.
AU - Zhemchuzhnikov, Mikhail K.
AU - Kutcherov, Dmitry
AU - Roslin, Tomas
AU - Schmidt, Niels Martin
AU - Van Gils, Jan A.
AU - Reneerkens, Jeroen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.
PY - 2024/3/27
Y1 - 2024/3/27
N2 - Shifts in phenology are among the key responses of organisms to climate change. When rates of phenological change differ between interacting species they may result in phenological asynchrony. Studies have found conflicting patterns concerning the direction and magnitude of changes in synchrony, which have been attributed to biological factors. A hitherto overlooked additional explanation are differences in the currency used to quantify resource phenology, such as abundance and biomass. Studying an insectivorous bird (the sanderling) and its prey, we show that the median date of cumulative arthropod biomass occurred, on average, 6.9 days after the median date of cumulative arthropod abundance. In some years this difference could be as large as 21 days. For 23 years, hatch dates of sanderlings became less synchronized with the median date of arthropod abundance, but more synchronized with the median date of arthropod biomass. The currency-specific trends can be explained by our finding that mean biomass per arthropod specimen increased with date. Using a conceptual simulation, we show that estimated rates of phenological change for abundance and biomass can differ depending on temporal shifts in the size distribution of resources. We conclude that studies of trophic mismatch based on different currencies for resource phenology can be incompatible with each other.
AB - Shifts in phenology are among the key responses of organisms to climate change. When rates of phenological change differ between interacting species they may result in phenological asynchrony. Studies have found conflicting patterns concerning the direction and magnitude of changes in synchrony, which have been attributed to biological factors. A hitherto overlooked additional explanation are differences in the currency used to quantify resource phenology, such as abundance and biomass. Studying an insectivorous bird (the sanderling) and its prey, we show that the median date of cumulative arthropod biomass occurred, on average, 6.9 days after the median date of cumulative arthropod abundance. In some years this difference could be as large as 21 days. For 23 years, hatch dates of sanderlings became less synchronized with the median date of arthropod abundance, but more synchronized with the median date of arthropod biomass. The currency-specific trends can be explained by our finding that mean biomass per arthropod specimen increased with date. Using a conceptual simulation, we show that estimated rates of phenological change for abundance and biomass can differ depending on temporal shifts in the size distribution of resources. We conclude that studies of trophic mismatch based on different currencies for resource phenology can be incompatible with each other.
KW - allometry
KW - ecological interactions
KW - phenological mismatch
KW - phenology
KW - terrestrial ecology
KW - trophic interactions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85189091477&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1098/rspb.2023.1785
DO - 10.1098/rspb.2023.1785
M3 - Article
C2 - 38531405
AN - SCOPUS:85189091477
SN - 1471-2954
VL - 291
JO - Proceedings of the Royal Society B
JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B
IS - 2019
M1 - 20231785
ER -