Abstract

Rapid global climate change is resulting in novel abiotic and biotic conditions and interactions. Identifying management strategies that maximize probability of long‐term persistence requires an understanding of the vulnerability of species to environmental changes. We sought to quantify the vulnerability of Kirtland's Warbler (Setophaga kirtlandii), a rare Neotropical migratory songbird that breeds almost exclusively in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan and winters in the Bahamian Archipelago, to projected environmental changes on the breeding and wintering grounds. We developed a population‐level simulation model that incorporates the influence of annual environmental conditions on the breeding and wintering grounds, and parameterized the model using empirical relationships. We simulated independent and additive effects of reduced breeding grounds habitat quantity and quality, and wintering grounds habitat quality, on population viability. Our results indicated the Kirtland's Warbler population is stable under current environmental and management conditions. Reduced breeding grounds habitat quantity resulted in reductions of the stable population size, but did not cause extinction under the scenarios we examined. In contrast, projected large reductions in wintering grounds precipitation caused the population to decline, with risk of extinction magnified when breeding habitat quantity or quality also decreased. Our study indicates that probability of long‐term persistence for Kirtland's Warbler will depend on climate change impacts to wintering grounds habitat quality and contributes to the growing literature documenting the importance of considering the full annual cycle for understanding population dynamics of migratory species.

Highlights

  • Rapid climate changes are occurring at the global scale (IPCC, 2013)

  • Species that undertake annual long‐dis‐ tance migrations, such as Neotropical migratory songbirds, may be vulnerable to rapid climate change because they rely on environmental conditions in multiple spatially discrete areas and the corridors between them (Carey, 2009)

  • We developed a population‐level simulation model that incorporates the influence of annual environmental conditions on the breeding and wintering grounds, and investigated effects of reduced breed‐ ing grounds habitat quantity and quality, and wintering grounds habitat quality, on population viability

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Rapid climate changes are occurring at the global scale (IPCC, 2013). These changes have the potential to dramatically alter ecological communities through the introduction of spatially and temporally novel abiotic conditions and biotic interactions (Blois, Zarnetske, Fitzpatrick, & Finnegan, 2013; Gibson‐Reinemer, Sheldon, & Rahel, 2015). A subsequent study using Random Forest models projected that cli‐ matic suitability will decrease for jack pine in the Upper Midwest as precipitation and temperature increase (Donner, Brown, Ribic, Nelson, & Greco, 2018) On their wintering grounds, Kirtland's Warblers subsist on fruiting shrubs and arthropods (Wunderle, Currie, & Ewert, 2007; Wunderle et al, 2010), with abundances of these food resources positively correlated with precipitation (Wunderle et al, 2014). We build from that initial work by projecting independent and additive effects of climate and management changes on long‐term popula‐ tion viability of the Kirtland's Warbler To achieve this objective, we developed a population‐level simulation model that incorporates the influence of annual environmental conditions on the breeding and wintering grounds, and investigated effects of reduced breed‐ ing grounds habitat quantity and quality, and wintering grounds habitat quality, on population viability. We did not consider effects of changes in wintering grounds habitat quantity because carrying capacity of Kirtland's Warblers is strongly associated with food availability, which varies annually and seasonally due to weather variability (Wunderle et al, 2014)

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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