Abstract

With a rapidly changing climate, there is an increasing need to predict how species will respond to changes in the physical environment. One approach is to use historic data to estimate the past influence of environmental variation on important demographic parameters and then use these relationships to project the abundance of a population or species under future climate scenarios. However, as novel climate conditions emerge, novel species responses may also appear. In some systems, environmental conditions beyond the range of those observed during the course of most long-term ecological studies are already evident. Yet little attention has been given to how these novel conditions may be influencing previously established environment–species relationships. Here, we model the relationships between ocean conditions and the demography of a long-lived seabird, Brandt’s cormorant (Phalacrocorax penicillatusI), in central California and show that these relationships have changed in recent years. Beginning in 2007/2008, the response of Brandt’s cormorant, an upper trophic level predator, to ocean conditions shifted, resulting in lower than predicted survival and breeding probability. Survival was generally less variable than breeding probability and was initially best predicted by the basin-scale forcing of the El Niño Southern Oscillation rather than local ocean conditions. The shifting response of Brandt’s cormorant to ocean conditions may be just a proximate indication of altered dynamics in the food web and that important forage fish are not responding to the physical ocean environment as expected. These changing relationships have important implications for our ability to project the effects of future climate change for species and communities.

Highlights

  • Ecologists have long been interested in the effects of environmental variability on populations

  • We model the relationships between ocean conditions and the demography of a long-lived seabird, Brandt’s cormorant (Phalacrocorax penicillatusI), in central California and show that these relationships have changed in recent years

  • We found evidence to suggest that the reproductive success of seabirds in central California is responding differently to ocean conditions than it has in the past and that the effects differ for two species feeding at different trophic levels [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Ecologists have long been interested in the effects of environmental variability on populations. Variance is increasing in an important large-scale forcing pattern, the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation (NPGO)[5], the spatial distributions of El Niño events are shifting [6,7,8], and the intensity of wind driving coastal upwelling is increasing [9,10] These are just a few of the recently observed changes that may have already produced deviations in established environment-species relationships. Given the potential importance of changes in adult survival and breeding probability to a population, here we follow up on our previous analysis of reproductive success of Brandt’s cormorant to examine the impact of shifting ocean conditions on these additional demographic parameters. We use over 40 years of data to provide an unusually robust historical context in which to place recent changes

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