The Prince George Citizen

Climate change knocking natural cycles out of synch

- Bob WEBER Citizen news service

Mother Nature is losing her timing.

A major study has concluded that the delicately choreograp­hed interactio­ns between species that keep food webs functionin­g are more and more out of synch. And while the paper isn’t conclusive, it casts a suspicious eye on climate change.

“Everything is consistent with the fact it’s getting warmer,” said Heather Kharouba, a University of Ottawa ecologist and lead author of a paper published Monday in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

Scientists have been finding for years that events in the natural world aren’t quite lining up the way they used to.

Caribou calves are born later during the thick of blackfly season. Migrating hummingbir­ds, adapted for a specific spring flower, miss its bloom. Seabirds no longer rear their chicks when fish are most abundant.

“Most of the examples were about food,” said Kharouba. “Is it available or is it not?”

Kharouba and her colleagues decided to find out if the phenomenon was widespread and if they could measure it.

Mining previous research from 1951 to 2013, they examined 88 species of mammals, birds and fish from four continents. The data included 54 different relationsh­ips involving predators and prey, plant eaters, pollinator­s and competitor­s.

The team found that, as the climate has warmed, events in those relationsh­ips have been occurring an average of four days earlier per decade since the early 1980s – about 14 days in total.

Not all are changing at the same rate, though.

Some are closer together; some are further apart. The split is about 50-50. The relative timing of the events between species is now, on average, off by about 21 days.

“It leads to a mismatch,” Kharouba said. “These events are out of synch.”

She said time spanned by the data was too short to prove the mismatches were caused by climate change. The correlatio­n, however, was strong.

“We think it is the case,” she said. “All the changes we see are exactly what we would predict with warmer temperatur­es and how we would expect biology to respond.”

The consequenc­es are similarly hard to predict, but potentiall­y far-reaching.

Mismatches at the bottom of the food chain could reduce resources all the way up, Kharouba said. One study in a lake found the timing of blooms for the one-celled plants and animals that underlie aquatic life is off by 34 days.

Conservati­on managers looking after endangered species may have to start taking environmen­tal mismatches into account, the ecologist suggested.

Not all species rely on specialize­d, carefully timed interactio­ns with other organisms. Others may be able to adapt.

But it’s not always possible for species to work things out for themselves. Some events are driven by warmth and some by day length. One is changing; the other isn’t.

This is new ground and scientists just don’t have the informatio­n to predict what’s going to happen.

“We don’t have the data,” Kharouba said. “We think it’s going to have an impact.”

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 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? A guillemot seabird sits on the beach of Cavalier in Anglet, France. Some sea bird species are no longer raising their chicks during the season when food is most abundant, possibly due to a climate change putting species’ biological cycles out of...
AP FILE PHOTO A guillemot seabird sits on the beach of Cavalier in Anglet, France. Some sea bird species are no longer raising their chicks during the season when food is most abundant, possibly due to a climate change putting species’ biological cycles out of...

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