Phenology: Climate Change is Shifting the Rhythm of Nature - Frontiers 2022 Report: Emerging Issues of Environmental Concern Chapter 3

Phenological mismatches have been detected through detailed studies on reproduction, pollination, survival and migration across a wide range of species (Renner and Zohner 2018; Ramaswami et al. 2019, Visser and Gienappe 2019). The reason for these differential shifts in response to climate change is that each organism is sensitive to different environmental drivers or shows different levels of sensitivity to a single environmental driver. These mismatches among consumers within a food web will affect individuals' reproduction and survival rates with eventual repercussions for populations and communities.

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: United Nations Environment Programme
Otros Autores: Visser, Marcel
Formato: Chapters and Articles biblioteca
Idioma:English
Publicado: 2022-02
Materias:PHENOLOGY, MIGRATORY SPECIES, CLIMATE CHANGE,
Acceso en línea:https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/38062
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Sumario:Phenological mismatches have been detected through detailed studies on reproduction, pollination, survival and migration across a wide range of species (Renner and Zohner 2018; Ramaswami et al. 2019, Visser and Gienappe 2019). The reason for these differential shifts in response to climate change is that each organism is sensitive to different environmental drivers or shows different levels of sensitivity to a single environmental driver. These mismatches among consumers within a food web will affect individuals' reproduction and survival rates with eventual repercussions for populations and communities.