The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Climate change causing forest birds to breed earlier in spring

-

Warmer nights caused by climate change are leading forest birds to build nests and lay eggs earlier in the springtime, researcher­s said.

The scientists warned the chicks might therefore be hatching after their main source of food is most plentiful, because warmer temperatur­es are also causing caterpilla­r numbers to peak earlier.

A team of biologists from Edinburgh University analysed data from 40 Scottish sites over a five-year period and found birds decide when to reproduce based on night-time temperatur­es in the spring.

They said as climate change causes temperatur­es to rise, the breeding patterns of birds such as blue tits are being altered.

While previous studies have shown warmer springs have led birds to begin breeding earlier, until now scientists had not identified the key factors causing this behaviour.

But the team warned the warmer temperatur­es are also causing peak caterpilla­r numbers to occur earlier in the year, so chicks may still begin hatching after periods when their main food source is most plentiful.

While birds like the blue tit are responding to this change, researcher­s warned this is often not fast enough.

Dr Jack Shutt, of Edinburgh University’s School of Biological Sciences, said: “Working out what informatio­n birds use to time breeding is key to us accurately predicting how this may change under future conditions, and what effect this will have on them.”

Blue tits were also found to lay eggs sooner if birch trees come into leaf earlier, they added.

The researcher­s said they had found some of the first evidence that birds use trees as a cue to timing breeding.

Using data gained from two national citizen science projects, the researcher­s found night-time temperatur­e and birch leafing have very similar effects on the breeding behaviour of woodland birds across the UK.

 ??  ?? A blue tit leaves the nest with debris in her bill.
A blue tit leaves the nest with debris in her bill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom