Publication | Open Access
Inbreeding and experience affect response to climate change by endangered woodpeckers
95
Citations
45
References
2002
Year
BiologyEnvironmental ChallengesReproductive SuccessBreeding BehaviorEngineeringReproduction ResponseFitnessWildlife EcologyNatural SciencesRange ShiftEvolutionary BiologyEndangered WoodpeckersAvian EvolutionFemale Red-cockaded WoodpeckersPopulation EcologyAnimal BehaviorConservation BiologyPicoides Borealis
In recent decades, female red-cockaded woodpeckers (Picoides borealis) have laid eggs increasingly earlier in response to a changing climate, as has been observed in several other bird species breeding at north temperate latitudes. Within each year, females that lay earlier are more productive than females that lay later. However, inexperienced females, experienced females who change mates and inbred birds have not adjusted to the changing climate by laying earlier, and have suffered reproductive costs as a result. Failure to respond to global climate change may be a further example of the reduced ability of inbred animals to respond to environmental challenges.
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