Abstract
Climatic warming can shift community composition driven by the colonization-extinction dynamics of species with different thermal preferences; but simultaneously, habitat fragmentation can mediate species’ responses to warming. As this potential interactive effect has proven difficult to test empirically, we collected data on birds over 10 years of climate warming in a reservoir subtropical island system that was formed 65 years ago. We investigated how the mechanisms underlying climate-driven directional change in community composition were mediated by habitat fragmentation. We found thermophilization driven by increasing warm-adapted species and decreasing cold-adapted species in terms of trends in colonization rate, extinction rate, occupancy rate and population size. Critically, colonization rates of warm-adapted species increased faster temporally on smaller or less isolated islands; cold-adapted species generally were lost more quickly temporally on closer islands. This provides support for dispersal limitation and microclimate buffering as primary proxies by which habitat fragmentation mediates species range shift. Overall, this study advances our understanding of biodiversity responses to interacting global change drivers.
1 Introduction
One widespread consequence of anthropogenic-caused climate warming is the shift in species’ distributions toward cooler regions (Chen et al., 2011; La Sorte & Thompson, 2007; Thomas & Lennon, 1999). As species move across the globe, the composition of community changes, with species both colonizing and departing (Menéndez et al., 2006; Tingley & Beissinger, 2013); yet colonizing and departing species are unlikely to be randomly drawn from species pools, but instead will be drawn depending on their traits, such as being warm-adapted versus cold-adapted. As a result, a warming climate should lead to compositional shifts toward relatively more warm-adapted species in local communities (Thomas et al., 2006), a phenomenon termed “thermophilization” (Feeley et al., 2020; Gottfried et al., 2012; Zellweger et al., 2020).
In practice, thermophilization can be measured by a temporal increase in the Community Temperature Index (CTI) (Devictor et al., 2008) – an estimation of the average temperature experienced by all species in an assemblage throughout their respective ranges. While thermophilization of communities is usually accompanied by an increase in warm-adapted species and a decrease in cold-adapted species (Curley et al., 2022; Prince & Zuckerberg, 2015; Tayleur et al., 2016) (Figure 1a), this process is usually spatially heterogeneous and depends on the availability of current habitat and the ability to disperse into newly suitable habitats (Gaüzère et al., 2017; Richard et al., 2021), both of which will be directly or indirectly affected by other global change stressors. Habitat fragmentation, usually defined as the process of transforming continuous habitat into spatially isolated and small patches (Fahrig, 2003), in particular, has been hypothesized to have interactive effects with climate change on community dynamics. Among the various ways in which habitat fragmentation is conceptualized and measured, patch area and isolation are two of the most used measures (Fahrig, 2003). Specifically, habitat fragmentation usually alters both habitat spatial structure and microclimate characteristics (Ewers & Banks-Leite, 2013; Fahrig, 2003), either of which can influence thermophilization processes (Gaüzère et al., 2017; Platts et al., 2019; Richard et al., 2021; Zellweger et al., 2020). Understanding the interaction between climate change and habitat fragmentation on community composition is essential to predicting biodiversity outcomes but we generally lack empirical examples with which to study this phenomenon (Opdam & Wascher, 2004).
Theoretically, habitat fragmentation could mediate differential dynamics of warm-adapted versus cold-adapted species either by changing existing habitats’ suitability or by limiting dispersal into newly suitable habitats (Newson et al., 2014; Opdam & Wascher, 2004) (Figure 1). The overall effect of fragmentation on climatic niche tracking of communities can be decomposed into three different mechanisms, each of which has been proposed and supported with different degrees of evidence. First, fragmented habitats may more weakly buffer macroclimate than intact habitats (Ewers & Banks-Leite, 2013), resulting in fragmented patches experiencing relatively higher temperatures. Increased temperature, especially in small patches, may boost the colonization or population growth rate of warm-adapted species but cause higher extinction risk or demographic declines of cold-adapted species (Figure 1b). This microclimate mechanism has been proposed as an important factor driving thermophilization in plant communities (Zellweger et al., 2020).
Second, larger patches generally contain higher habitat heterogeneity and therefore also encompass higher food availability and microrefugia (Liu et al., 2020). A diversity of habitats and resources is closely related to a species’ successful establishment and can act as a buffer against extinction under climate change (Luoto & Heikkinen, 2008). For instance, higher habitat diversity can boost the ability of niche tracking in bird communities (Gaüzère et al., 2017), mainly by fostering species’ dispersal into new, climatically suitable sites. Similarly, in areas where topography generates greater microclimate variation, population losses of plants and insects due to climate change are substantially reduced (Suggitt et al., 2018). We thus expect that the reduction in habitat heterogeneity associated with higher fragmentation will intensify the loss of cold-adapted species and weaken the colonization of warm-adapted species (Figure 1c).
Third, habitat fragmentation could prevent or interrupt species’ dispersal which is essential for them to track suitable climatic niches (McGuire et al., 2016; Opdam & Wascher, 2004; Thomas et al., 2006). This limitation may come from higher mortality rate with increasing dispersal distance during searching for suitable patches (Brooker et al., 1999), and will influence the colonization-extinction dynamics underlying climate response (Fourcade et al., 2021; Hylander & Ehrlén, 2013). For example, habitat fragmentation renders habitats to be too isolated to be colonized, causing sedentary butterflies to lag more behind climate warming in Britain than mobile ones (Warren et al., 2001). All things being equal, less isolated patches should experience increasing rate in colonization of warm-adapted species under warming, benefitting from near sources of species; meanwhile, cold-adapted species should experience higher extinction rates on less isolated patches because they can emigrate easily from these patches under climate warming (Figure 1d).
Although the overall effect of habitat fragmentation on climate-induced community dynamics has been established, few empirical studies have ever considered these multiple mechanisms simultaneously. Here, we use 10 years of bird community data in a subtropical land-bridge island system (Thousand Island Lake, TIL, China, Figure 2) during a period of consistent climatic warming (Appendix 1—figure 1) to explore whether and how community thermal niche composition responds to climate change and how habitat fragmentation mediates the process. This reservoir island system was formed 65 years ago due to dam construction. Specifically, we focused on the following three predictions:
We predict the existence of thermophilization of bird communities in our fragmented land-bridge island system, characterized by an increasing temporal trend of CTI.
We predict that thermophilization of bird communities should result from both increasing warm-adapted species and abundances and decreasing cold-adapted species and abundances. We also predict that, over time with a warming climate, warm-adapted species should increase their colonization rate while cold-adapted species should increase their extinction rate (Figure 1a).
We predict that habitat fragmentation – measured as island area and distance to the mainland – will mediate the two main driving processes of thermophilization: colonization of warm-adapted species and extinction of cold-adapted species. Following our theoretical framework, if the climate buffering effect dominates (Figure 1b) area effects, we expect the differential trends of warm-adapted species versus cold-adapted species to be more extreme on smaller islands (i.e., even faster colonization of warm-adapted, even faster extinction of cold-adapted) due to weaker microclimate buffering. Alternatively, if the effects of habitat heterogeneity dominate (Figure 1c) area effects, cold-adapted species will again show greater extinction, but warm-adapted species will alternatively experience lower colonization on smaller islands (relative to larger islands) due to less abundant resources (Si et al., 2017). Finally, we predict that on more isolated islands (Figure 1d), the colonization of warm-adapted species and the extinction of cold-adapted species will increase more slowly because isolation hinders both immigration and emigration.
2 Results
The number of species detected in surveys on each island across the study period averaged 13.37 ±6.26 (mean ±SD) species, ranging from 2 to 40 species, with an observed gamma diversity of 60 species. The STI of all 60 birds averaged 19.94 ±3.58 ℃ (mean ±SD) and ranged from 9.30 ℃ (Cuculus canorus) to 27.20 ℃ (Prinia inornate), with a median of 20.63 ℃ (Appendix 1—figure 2; Appendix 1—figure 3). STI of resident species (n = 47) and summer visitors (n = 13) did not show a significant difference (t-test: t = 0.23, df = 17.82, p = 0.82). No significant correlation was found between STI and species’ ecological traits; specifically, the continuous variables of dispersal ability, body size, body mass and clutch size (Pearson correlations for each, |r| < 0.22), and the categorial variables of diet (carnivorous/omnivorous/herbivory), active layer (canopy/mid/low), and residence type (resident species/summer visitor).
2.1 Thermophilization of bird communities
At the landscape scale, considering species detected across the study area, occurrence-based CTI (CTIoccur; see section 4.4) showed no trend (posterior mean temporal trend = 0.414; 95% CrI: −12.751, 13.554) but abundance-based CTI (CTIabun; see section 4.4) showed a significant increasing trend (temporal trend [mean ± SE] = 0.327 ± 0.041, t = 7.989, p < 0.001). When measuring CTI trends for individual islands (expressed as ℃/ unit year), we found significant increases in CTI for both occurrence-(mean temporal trend = 0.124; 95% CrI: 0.108, 0.137) and abundance-based indices (temporal trend = 0.320 ± 0.021, t493 = 15.534, p < 0.001; Figure 3).
2.2 Mechanisms underlying CTI trends
Comparing across species with different thermal affinities, we found a weak positive linear relationship between STI and species-specific temporal occupancy trends (t-test: slope = 0.206, t58 = 1.766, p = 0.082; Figure 4a), indicating warm-adapted species were marginally more likely to increase in occurrence over time. Decomposing occurrence change to dynamic parameters; however, we found a significant positive relationship between STI and species’ temporal trends in colonization (t-test: slope = 0.259, p = 0.043) and a significant negative relationship between STI and species’ temporal trends in extinction (t-test: slope = - 0.414, p = 0.015; Appendix 1—figure 4). Thus, warm-adapted species generally increased in occupancy over time, which was driven by an increase in colonization probability and a decrease in extinction probability; in contrast, cold-adapted species generally decreased in occupancy over time, which was driven by an increase in extinction probability and a decrease in colonization probability (Figure 4b). Considering all species, the influence of a thermal-association gradient underlying occurrence dynamics resulted in a particularly strong correlation between species’ trends in colonization and extinction probabilities (Pearson correlation r = −0.77; Figure 4b).
Similar patterns were found for abundance, where we detected a strong positive relationship (t-test: slope = 0.153, t58 = 3.047, p = 0.003) between STI and each species’ temporal trend in abundance: warm-adapted species generally increased abundance while cold-adapted species decreased over 10 years (Figure 4c). At the island scale, both total abundance and total species richness increased significantly for the warm-adapted species group while both responses significantly decreased for the cold-adapted species (richness trend, p < 0.001; total abundance trend, p < 0.001; Appendix 1—figure 5).
2.3 The mediating effects of fragmentation on colonization and extinction processes
Both colonization and extinction probabilities showed evidence of being moderated by fragmentation (Figure 5). Of particular interest was how the temporal trend in dynamic parameters varied as a function of area or isolation (i.e., Year:Area or Year:Isolation effects). Although species-specific interaction terms were not generally significant for most species, overall trends could be assessed across species. In particular, the effect of isolation on temporal dynamics of thermophilization was relatively consistent across cold-(Figure 5a) and warm-adapted species (Figure 5b); specifically, on islands nearer to the mainland, warm-adapted species (15 out of 15 investigated species) increased their colonization probability at a higher rate over time, while most cold-adapted species (21 out of 23 species) increased their extinction probability at a higher rate.
Island area, in contrast, had a more mixed role in moderating colonization/extinction rates across species. For most warm-adapted species (11 out of 15 investigated species; Figure 5b), colonization rates increased faster over time on smaller islands (i.e., negative area:year interaction term); however, the colonization rates of the other four species increased faster on larger islands, including the only significant positive interactive effect (Dendrocitta formosae). For cold-adapted species, extinction rates were approximately equally split between increasing faster on smaller islands (12 out of 23 species) and increasing faster on larger islands (11 out of 23 species), including two species, Spizixos semitorques and Pericrocotus cantonensis, which showed significantly increasing rates of extinction on larger islands.
3 Discussion
Our study explored the driving processes underlying a decade of thermophilization of a bird community breeding in a model fragmented system, specifically testing whether and how habitat fragmentation may mediate the colonization-extinction dynamics which underly shifts in mean community traits. Our results confirm that community thermal niche composition was changing directionally, mainly through gains in warm-adapted species and individuals and losses in cold-adapted species and individuals. We further found that habitat fragmentation influences two processes of thermophilization: colonization rates of most warm-adapted species tended to increase faster on smaller and less isolated islands, while the loss rates of most cold-adapted species tended to be exacerbated on less isolated islands.
3.1 Thermophilization of bird communities
Although thermophilization has been found in many taxa (Lajeunesse & Fourcade, 2022) and is more apparent in the tropics than in temperate zones (Freeman et al., 2021), there are few empirical demonstrations of this process in subtropical fragmented systems. We found decadal-scale thermophilization evident in both occurrence- and abundance-based metrics, although the response was considerably stronger for abundance. This result is consistent with work in other systems, where abundance-weighted CTI generally responds more quickly than occurrence-based CTI given climatic warming (Devictor et al., 2008; Lindström et al., 2013; Oliver et al., 2017; Tayleur et al., 2016). Notably, when tested on the landscape scale (versus on individual island communities), only the abundance-based thermophilization trend was significant, indicating thermophilization of bird communities was mostly due to occurrence dynamics within the region, rather than exogenous community turnover outside the region.
3.2 Mechanisms underlying CTI trends
Consistent with our expectation, we found an overall increase in occupancy and abundance of warm-adapted species and a decrease in occupancy and abundance of cold-adapted species, which together contributed to thermophilization. This pattern is consistent with many previous studies conducted in continuous habitats in Europe or North America both for breeding and non-breeding bird communities (Curley et al., 2022; Prince & Zuckerberg, 2015; Tayleur et al., 2016). Also consistent with our expectation was that occupancy change was the product of temporal trends in both colonization and extinction dynamics; namely, warm-adapted species showed increasing colonization and decreasing extinction rates, while, cold-adapted species showed decreasing colonization and increasing extinction rates. Following that STI is predictably related to temporal trends in colonization and extinction rate (Figure 4), we can conclude that STI is an effective broad indicator of relative climatic vulnerability within a community, where species with relatively higher thermal preferences are generally poised to benefit from local climate warming and vice versa. This conclusion is supported by studies that have established relationships between STI and species’ population trend (Pearce-Higgins et al., 2015; Rigal et al., 2023), species’ contribution analysis (Tayleur et al., 2016), or spatial occupancy (Anderson et al., 2023). Decomposing average community trait shifts into colonization and extinction dynamics of individual species and their associated traits provides a comprehensive and more nuanced insight into community response to climate change.
There are numerous reasons why we would expect temperature to strongly drive community change, as temperature is related to species’ survival through food resources, foraging time, and thermoregulatory requirements (Dunn & Møller, 2019). The local population growth of warm-adapted species may mirror their range expansion under climate warming. For example, thermophilization of avian communities in North America is mainly owed to the species that have increased in both range and population size (Curley et al., 2022). Contemporary latitudinal range shifts are thought to be primarily resultant of the expansion of polar margins of equatorial-distributed species (La Sorte & Thompson, 2007; Thomas & Lennon, 1999), possibly due to extinction lags at equatorial margins(La Sorte & Jetz, 2012). TIL is near the cold edge of most warm-adapted species like Hemixos castanonotus, Pericrocotus solaris, and Lonchura punctulate. Combined with the prediction that most birds in China should move upslope or poleward under climate change (Hu et al., 2020), we infer that local climate will continue to shift these warm-adapted species toward a thermal optimum, predicting continued population growth in the near future for these species (Sagarin & Gaines, 2002).
Meanwhile, most cold-adapted species in our system demonstrated increasing extinction rates over time. Extinctions are more difficult to detect than range expansions, partly due to temporal lags (Thomas et al., 2006; Thomas & Lennon, 1999) but also due to pervasive bias of false absences in time series data (Tingley & Beissinger, 2009). Moreover, species’ extinctions are more likely to be mediated by factors such as rainfall, species interactions, and changes in vegetation (Paquette & Hargreaves, 2021; Thomas & Lennon, 1999), which will further lead to unequal rates of extinction relative to colonization. In our community, although there are many cold-adapted species – such as Streptopelia orientalis, Phasianus colchicus, Passer montanus, and Emberiza cioides – that have northern distributional limits much farther northern than our site, our site is not close to the current southern boundary for these species either. Even so, they still showed considerable loss in TIL, suggesting fragmented landscape exacerbated the negative effect of warming on these cold-adapted species.
Despite the general trend, not all warm-adapted species increased (in abundance or occupancy) and not all cold-adapted species decreased. In other words, not all species contributed equally to the process of thermophilization, as has been seen elsewhere (Tayleur et al., 2016). Variation in species’ response relates to their true thermal tolerance in the study region, which would require additional physiological data to measure and could also be influenced by habitat usage and biotic interactions.
3.3 The mediating effect of fragmentation on colonization and extinction processes
It has long been thought that habitat fragmentation can impact species’ climate tracking (Opdam & Wascher, 2004) but there are only a few empirical studies to date (Fourcade et al., 2021; Warren et al., 2001). Our research examining colonization-extinction dynamics provides empirical evidence of the possible mechanisms in a land-bridge island system.
As expected, the mediating effect of isolation on the two main processes of thermophilization was relatively consistent, with warm-adapted species colonizing faster and cold-adapted species being extirpated faster on islands nearer to the mainland. This indicates that isolation from population sources can limit the dispersal that underlies range shifts, supporting the general perception that habitat fragmentation is thought to impede climate-driven range expansions (Opdam & Wascher, 2004) or even block them (Warren et al., 2001). While we cannot truly distinguish in our system between local extinction and emigration, we suspect that given two islands equal except in isolation, if both lose suitability due to climate change, individuals can easily emigrate from the island nearer to the mainland, while individuals on the more isolated island would be more likely to be trapped in place until the species went locally extinct due to a lack of rescue.
As a caveat, we only consider the distance to the nearest mainland as a measure of fragmentation, consistent with previous work in this system (Si et al., 2014), but we acknowledge that other distance-based metrics of isolation that incorporate inter-island connections and island size could hint on a more complex pattern going on in real-life than was assumed for this study, thus reveal additional insights on fragmentation effects. For instance, smaller islands may also potentially utilize species pools from nearby larger islands, rather than being limited solely to those from the mainland. The spatial arrangement of islands, like the arrangement of habitat, can influence niche tracking of species (Fourcade et al., 2021). Future studies should use a network approach to take these metrics into account to thoroughly understand the influence of isolation and spatial arrangement of patches in mediating the effect of climate warming on species.
Island size also had pervasive effects on underlying thermophilization dynamics. In our study, the colonization rate of a large proportion of warm-adapted species (11 out of 15) and half of cold-adapted species (12 out of 23) were increasing more rapidly on smaller islands. Similarly, a lower proportion of habitats enhances the colonization of warm-adapted species under climate change in the butterfly assemblage (Fourcade et al., 2021). The observed colonization-extinction patterns on smaller islands support the hypothesis that warm-adapted species benefit from the lowered thermal buffering of ambient temperature on smaller islands, while the same mechanism may speed up extinction (or emigration) of cold-adapted species (Figure 1b). To investigate this mechanistic hypothesis more thoroughly, using understory air temperature data monitored on 20 islands in the breeding season in 2022, we found that temperature buffering ability indeed was diminished on smaller islands (Appendix 1—figure 6), further supporting microclimate as a primary driver of fragmentation’s mediation of thermophilization (Zellweger et al., 2020).
The increased extinction rate of some cold-adapted species on smaller islands is also consistent with the hypothesized impacts of reduced habitat heterogeneity (Figure 1c). Previous studies found that areas with greater amounts of habitat featured lower extinction rates of cold-adapted butterfly species (Fourcade et al., 2021), possibly by facilitating movement to colder microclimates (Suggitt et al., 2018). We thus suppose that habitat heterogeneity could also mitigate the loss of these relatively cold-adapted species as expected. Habitat diversity, including the observed number of species, the rarefied species richness per island, species density and the rarefied species richness per unit area, all increased significantly with island area instead of isolation in our system (Liu et al., 2020). Thus, as habitat heterogeneity was only consistent with our observed response of cold-adapted species (Figure 1c), while microclimate buffering is consistent with observed responses of both warm- and cold-adapted species (Figure 1b), our evidence more consistently supports the latter than the former.
Contrary to any expected mechanisms (Figure 1), the extinction rate of some cold-adapted species – such as Spizixos semitorques and Pericrocotus cantonensis – was increased faster on larger islands. Although post hoc, we speculate that these species face stronger predation pressures on larger islands. For example, predators like snakes and felids may also increase activity under climate warming (DeGregorio et al., 2015), but these predators only exist in our system on the larger islands. Besides, Garrulax canorus, which is a warm-adapted species, increased faster on larger islands. This species may depend more on habitat heterogeneity than microclimate alone, including food resources and microrefugia, which is related to faster climate tracking (Gaüzère et al., 2017). Overall, these idiosyncratic responses reveal several possible mechanisms in regulating species’ climate responses, including resource demands and biological interactions like competition and predation. Future studies are needed to take these factors into account to understand the complex mechanisms by which habitat loss meditates species range shifts.
Overall, our findings have important implications for conservation practices. Firstly, we confirmed the role of isolation in limiting range shifting. Better connected landscapes should be developed to remove dispersal constraints and facilitate species’ relocation to the best suitable microclimate. Second, small patches can foster the establishment of newly adapted warm-adapted species while large patches can act as refugia for cold-adapted species. Therefore, preserving patches of diverse sizes can act as stepping stones or shelters in a warming climate depending on the thermal affinity of species. These insights are important supplement to the previous emphasis on the role of habitat diversity in fostering (Richard et al., 2021) or reducing (Gaüzère et al., 2017) community-level climate debt.
4 Materials and Methods
4.1 Study area and islands selection
The Thousand Island Lake (TIL), located in eastern China, was formed in 1959 following the construction of the Xin’anjiang Dam for hydroelectricity (Figure 2). When the lake is at its highest, there are 1078 islands with an area larger than 0.25 ha. Currently, about 90% of the forested areas are dominated by Masson pine (Pinus massoniana) in the canopy and broad-leaved species (e.g. Loropetalum chinensei, Vaccinium carlesii and Rhododendron simsii) in the sub-canopy and understory (Liu et al., 2020). The climatic zone is a typical monsoon climate. The precipitation is mainly concentrated between April and June with an average yearly rainfall of 1430 mm. The average annual temperature is 17°C (hottest from June to August) and the average daily temperature ranges from –7.6 °C in January to 41.8 °C in July (Si et al., 2017).
We selected 36 islands according to a gradient of island area and isolation with a guarantee of no significant correlation between island area and isolation (Pearson r = −0.21, p = 0.21). For each island, we calculated island area and isolation (measured in the nearest Euclidean distance to the mainland) to represent the degree of habitat fragmentation (Figure 2). Distance to the mainland is the best distance-based measure in fitting species’ colonization rate and extinction rate in TIL (Si et al., 2014). Since lake formation, the islands have been protected by forbidding logging, allowing natural succession pathways to occur.
4.2 Bird data
We established 53 survey transects on 36 islands with the sampling effort on each island roughly proportional to the logarithm of the island area (Schoereder et al., 2004). As a result, 53 transects on 36 islands were sampled, including eight transect trails on the largest study island (area = 1058 ha), four transects on two islands between 100 and 500 ha, two transects on four islands between 10 and 100 ha, and one on each of the remaining small islands (c. 1 ha for most islands) (Si et al., 2018). Breeding bird communities were surveyed on each transect nine times annually (three times per month from April to June) from 2012 to 2021 (Si et al., 2017). In each survey, observers walked along each transect at a constant speed (2.0 km/h) and recorded all the birds seen or heard on the survey islands. To minimize the bias, the order and direction of each island surveyed were randomized. We based our abundance estimate on the maximum number of individuals recorded across the nine annual surveys. We excluded non-breeding species, nocturnal and crepuscular species, high-flying species passing over the islands (e.g., raptors, swallows) and strongly water-associated birds (e.g., cormorants) from our record. First, our surveys were conducted during the day, so some nocturnal and crepuscular species, such as the owls and nightjars were excluded because of inadequate survey design. Second, wagtail, kingfisher, and water birds such as ducks and herons were excluded because we were only interested in forest birds. Third, birds like swallows, and eagles who were usually flying or soaring in the air rather than staying on islands, were also excluded as it was difficult to determine their definite belonging islands. Following these filtering, 60 species were finally retained.
4.3 Climate data
We obtained climate data (monthly average temperature from 2012 to 2021) from the Meteorological Bureau of Chun’an County in Zhejiang Province, China. We calculated breeding season temperature as the average of the mean monthly temperature from April to June in order to represent the thermal conditions birds experience at this site each year (Lindström et al., 2013). Breeding season temperature increased significantly over 10 years (slope = 0.078, r2 = 34.53%, p = 0.04, Appendix 1—figure 1).
4.4 STI and CTI
We followed the methods of Devictor et al. (2008) to calculate a species temperature index (STI) using ArcMap 10.3. STI of a given species is defined as the average temperature of breeding months (April – June) across its distributional range (restricted to the Northern hemisphere) averaged over 1970–2000. Monthly temperature data were obtained from WorldClim at a resolution of 30-arc seconds (http://www.worldclim.org). Distributional maps were extracted from Birdlife International 2019 (http://datazone.birdlife.org/species/requestdis), in which we selected only the distributional regions where the species is either resident or breeding. All species were divided into two groups indicating their relative thermal preference: species with STI higher than the median STI were labeled as warm-adapted species, and species lower than the median STI were labeled as cold-adapted species (A. E. Bates et al., 2017). The STI of a species can differ depending on distributional and climate data but the rank order of species STI is highly correlated across methods (Barnagaud et al., 2013). We verified the robustness of our STI calculations using different distributional ranges and annual time windows (Appendix 1— figure 2).
CTI is a community-level index representing the average species thermal niche of all species or individuals in the community (Devictor et al., 2008). Accordingly, for each community in each year, CTI was calculated as the average STI of all occurring species (hereafter: CTIoccur) or counted individuals (hereafter: CTIabun):
where Nj,t is the total number of species surveyed in the community j in year t, Ai,j,t denoted the maximum abundance among nine surveys of the i th species in community j in year t.
CTIoccur was calculated using occurrence data corrected for imperfect detection (see next section), while CTIabun was estimated using the maximum annual count across 9 surveys. Given that our survey effort was so high (i.e., 9 repeat surveys per year), true abundance should be highly correlated with maximum observed abundance (MacKenzie et al., 2006). We also used these occurrence and abundance metrics from all islands to compute each year’s regional CTI at the landscape level.
4.5 Multispecies dynamic occupancy model
Presence-absence data can be highly sensitive to false negatives, so to explore the driving processes of change in CTIoccur, and to explore how habitat fragmentation mediated the main processes while accounting for the imperfect detection, we developed a spatially hierarchical dynamic multi-species occupancy model (MSOM) in a Bayesian framework based on the model by Royle and Kéry (2007). We denote ynijt as the observation (detected = 1; undetected = 0) for species n (1–60 species) in survey visit j (1–9 surveys) at transect i (1–53 transects) in year t (1–10 years). Observation, ynijt is assumed to be the result of imperfect detection of the true occurrence status, znit (1 or 0), and is thus modeled as a Bernoulli-distributed variable with a probability of pnijt ×znit, where pnijt is the probability of detection for a given survey along a transect:
where znit is assumed to be of fixed presence/absence status for a given species across all j survey intervals within year t. However, given that individual birds move dynamically across territories within a year, during 9 surveys each year, we broadly interpret our estimates of “occupancy” as “use” (Si et al., 2018) to relax the closure assumption (MacKenzie et al., 2004).
Each site has an initial value of occupancy (ψni1) which can be given a uniform prior distribution from 0 to 1, and occupancy (ψnit) in subsequent years (t > 1) is determined based on whether sites become colonized or remain occupied through persistence (MacKenzie et al., 2003):
where ψnit, εni,t-1, γni,t-1 are transect-level probabilities of occupancy, extinction, and colonization, respectively.
We modeled the probability of detection, pnijt, as a function of the length of the transect, lengthi and the ordinal day of year, dayijt. Island identity was included as a random effect to account for the nonindependence of transects within the same islands.
To explore how colonization rate and extinction rate change across 10 years and how habitat fragmentation mediated these dynamics processes, we modeled site-level extinction and colonization (εni,t, γni,t) each as a logit-linear function of 5 covariates: year, island area, isolation, the interaction between year and area and between isolation and year. Year was added as a random slope, thus allowing the temporal trend in the colonization or extinction to vary with island area and isolation:
In all cases, continuous covariates were z-transformed (mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1). There is no strong correlation between island area and isolation (Pearson correlation r = −0.214) so these effects can be considered independent. We fit the MSOM with JAGS (Plummer, 2003) using the package rjags (Plummer, 2023) in R v4.3.1 (R Core Team, 2023). We used vague priors (e.g., normal with μ = 0, τ = 0.01). We ran three chains for 60,000 iterations, discarded the first 40,000 as burn-in and thinned by 20, yielding a combined posterior sample of 3000. We extracted 600 iterations across three chains for Z to calculate CTIoccur. Convergence was checked visually with trace plots and confirmed with a Gelman–Rubin statistic < 1.1 (Gelman & Rubin, 1992). Inference on parameters was made using 95% and 80% Bayesian credible intervals. We checked the posterior predictive ability of the model fit by calculating Bayesian p-values (p = 0.488, indicating an unbiased estimation of our model) (Gelman et al., 1996).
4.6 Statistical analysis
4.6.1 Thermophilization of bird communities
To test for occurrence-based thermophilization at the island level, Bayesian linear regression using R2jags (Su & Yajima, 2021) was used to derive a posterior estimate of the temporal trend in CTIoccur while propagating error in the estimation of CTIoccur. The continuous variable year (z-transformed) was incorporated as the only predictor. To account for the nonindependence of data within islands, we included island identity as a random intercept, thus allowing intercepts to vary across islands. We used vague priors (e.g., normal with μ = 0, τ = 0.001) for intercept and year effect. We ran three chains for 10,000 iterations, discarded the first 5,000 as burn-in and thinned by 5, yielding a combined posterior sample of 3000. We used the function MCMCsummary to get posterior intervals of the intercept and year effect, which were then used for plotting.
To test for abundance-based thermophilization, linear mixed effect models (LMM) with restricted maximum likelihood (REML) were used to model temporal trends in CTIabun using function lme in R package nlme (Pinheiro et al., 2017). As with the occurrence analysis, we used the continuous variable year (z-transformed) as the only fixed effect and island as a random intercept. To account for the temporal autocorrelation of CTI from the same island through time, we included the first-order correlation structure (e.g. the corAR1 structure) because observations sampled from the nearby years may be more similar.
We also tested whether the overall regional bird composition (i.e. gamma diversity) experienced thermophilization. Bayesian linear regression was used for modeling temporal trends in regional CTIoccur. For abundance, a generalized least square (GLS) model was used to test the relationship between CTIabun and continuous variable year while accounting for potential temporal autocorrelation. GLS was conducted using gls function in nlme R package (Pinheiro et al., 2023).
4.6.2 Mechanisms underlying CTI trends
To explore the dynamics underlying trends in CTIoccur, specifically, whether thermophilization was accompanied by increasing occupancy of warm-adapted species and decreasing occupancy of cold-adapted species, we extracted 600 posterior samples of occupancy rate per species, and summarized ψnt by its mean and variation (logit-transformed to meet normality). We then modeled each species’ temporal trend in occupancy (ψnt) over time using Bayesian linear regression in R2jags (Su & Yajima, 2021) to account for propagated uncertainty in ψnt. Similarly, to decompose the CTIabun trend, we modeled each species’ temporal trend in maximum abundance using a generalized linear mixed effect model with Poisson error structure while accounting for potential overdispersion – via an observation-specific random effect (Harrison, 2014). Weighted linear regression models tested for a relationship between STI and occupancy trend and between STI and abundance trend. This analysis was conducted using function lmer in package lme4 (D. Bates et al., 2015). Temporal correlations between occupancy and colonization or extinction rates were measured with Pearson correlations, using colonization and extinction rates derived directly from the fitted MSOM.
As a complementary analysis, we also investigated the trend in species richness or total abundance of the two thermal preference groups, separately. The total richness or abundance in each group was calculated on each transect and in each year. We then modeled temporal trends of natural logarithm-transformed richness or abundance using LMM with island identity as the random effect. Partial regression plots from LMM were produced using ggeffects R package (Lüdecke, 2018). For each model, we checked for normality of residuals and computed goodness-of-fit metrics (R2) including conditional and marginal R2 (Nakagawa & Schielzeth, 2013) using performance R package (Lüdecke et al., 2021). All continuous fixed effects in the models were standardized (mean = 0 and SD = 1) to ease computation and facilitate the interpretation and comparison of coefficients within and across models (Schielzeth, 2010).
4.6.3 The mediating effects of habitat fragmentation on colonization and extinction processes
An increasing colonization trend of warm-adapted species and increasing extinction trend of cold-adapted species are two main expected processes that cause thermophilization (Fourcade et al., 2021). To test our third prediction about the mediating effect of habitat fragmentation, we selected warm-adapted species that had an increasing trend in colonization rate (positive year effect in colonization rate) and cold-adapted species that had an increasing extinction rate (positive year effect in extinction rate). For each of these species, we extracted their posterior effect of year, area, isolation, and the interaction terms from previously fit models. The interaction terms reveal if habitat fragmentation positively or negatively affects either colonization or extinction processes.
Acknowledgements
We sincerely thank numerous graduate students in our group for the bird surveys in the field, and the Xin’an River Ecological Development Group Corporation, Chun’an Forestry Bureau, and the Thousand Island Lake National Forest Park for research permits. We also thank Dr. Di Zeng and Dr. Yuhao Zhao from East China Normal University for their insightful comments on the research. Zhe Liu from Ludong University helped a lot in learning ArcMap.
Additional information
Funding
This study is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (#32030066 to P.D.; #32071545 to Xingfeng Si), Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province (#LD21C030002 to Ping Ding). The funders had roles in study design, data collection and interpretation, and the decision to submit the work for publication.
Author contributions
Juan Liu: Conceptualization; data curation; formal analysis; methodology; visualization; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. Morgan W. Tingley: formal analysis; methodology; visualization; writing – review and editing. Qiang Wu: data curation; visualization; writing – original draft (supporting); writing – review and editing. Peng Ren: data curation; visualization; writing – original draft (supporting); writing – review and editing. Tinghao Jin: data curation; formal analysis; methodology; visualization; writing – original draft (supporting); writing – review and editing. Ping Ding: Supervision; conceptualization; data curation; funding acquisition; methodology; writing – review and editing. Xingfeng Si: Supervision; conceptualization; methodology; data curation; funding acquisition; writing – review and editing.
Competing interests
The authors declare no conflicts of interests.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are openly available in Figshare at https://figshare.com/s/7a16974114262d280ef7.
Code availability
The code that supports the findings of this study is openly available in Figshare at https://figshare.com/s/7a16974114262d280ef7.
Appendix 1
References
- Climate-related range shifts in Arctic-breeding shorebirdsEcology and Evolution 13https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9797
- Species’ thermal preferences affect forest bird communities along landscape and local scale habitat gradientsEcography 36:1218–1226https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2012.00227.x
- Biological interactions both facilitate and resist climate-related functional change in temperate reef communitiesProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 284https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2017.0484
- Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4Journal of Statistical Software 67:1–48
- Animal dispersal in fragmented habitat: measuring habitat connectivity, corridor use, and dispersal mortalityConservation Ecology 3:1–22https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-00109-030104
- Rapid range shifts of species associated with high levels of climate warmingScience 333:1024–1026https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1206432
- Evaluating compositional changes in the avian communities of eastern North America using temperature and precipitation indicesJournal of Biogeography 49:739–752https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14340
- Indirect effect of climate change: Shifts in ratsnake behavior alter intensity and timing of avian nest predationEcological Modelling 312:239–246https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.05.031
- Birds are tracking climate warming, but not fast enoughProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 275:2743–2748https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2008.0878
- Effects of climate change on birdsOxford, UK: Oxford University Press
- Fragmentation Impairs the Microclimate Buffering Effect of Tropical ForestsPLOS ONE 8https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058093
- Effects of habitat fragmentation on biodiversityAnnual review of ecology, evolution, and systematics 34:487–515
- Climate-driven changes in the composition of New World plant communitiesNature Climate Change 10:965–970https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0873-2
- Habitat amount and distribution modify community dynamics under climate changeEcology Letters 24:950–957https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13691
- Montane species track rising temperatures better in the tropics than in the temperate zoneEcology Letters 24:1697–1708https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13762
- Where do they go? The effects of topography and habitat diversity on reducing climatic debt in birdsGlobal Change Biology 23:2218–2229https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13500
- Posterior predictive assessment of model fitness via realized discrepanciesStatistica sinica 6:733–760https://doi.org/10.2307/24306036
- Inference from iterative simulation using multiple sequencesStatistical science 7:457–472https://doi.org/10.1214/ss/1177011136
- Continent-wide response of mountain vegetation to climate changeNature Climate Change 2:111–115https://doi.org/10.1038/NCLIMATE1329
- Using observation-level random effects to model overdispersion in count data in ecology and evolutionPeerJ 2https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.616
- Shifts in bird ranges and conservation priorities in China under climate changePLOS ONE 15https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240225
- The mechanisms causing extinction debtsTrends in ecology & evolution 28:341–346https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2013.01.010
- Tracking of climatic niche boundaries under recent climate changeJournal of Animal Ecology 81:914–925https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2656.2012.01958.x
- Poleward shifts in winter ranges of North American birdsEcology 88:1803–1812https://doi.org/10.1890/06-1072.1
- Temporal analysis of GBIF data reveals the restructuring of communities following climate changeJournal of Animal Ecology 92:391–402https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13854
- Rapid changes in bird community composition at multiple temporal and spatial scales in response to recent climate changeEcography 36:313–322https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2012.07799.x
- Environmental filtering underpins the island species—area relationship in a subtropical anthropogenic archipelagoJournal of Ecology 108:424–432https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13272
- ggeffects: Tidy data frames of marginal effects from regression modelsJournal of Open Source Software 3https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.00772
- performance: An R Package for AssessmentComparison and Testing of Statistical Models. Journal of Open Source Software 6
- Disregarding topographical heterogeneity biases species turnover assessments based on bioclimatic modelsGlobal Change Biology 14:483–494https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2007.01527.x
- Investigating species co-occurrence patterns when species are detected imperfectlyJournal of Animal Ecology 73:546–555https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0021-8790.2004.00828.x
- Estimating site occupancy, colonization, and local extinction when a species is detected imperfectlyEcology 84:2200–2207https://doi.org/10.1890/02-3090
- Occupancy estimation and modelinginferring patterns and dynamics of species occurrence: Academic Press
- Achieving climate connectivity in a fragmented landscapeProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113:7195–7200https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1602817113
- Species richness changes lag behind climate changeProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 273:1465–1470
- A general and simple method for obtaining R2 from generalized linear mixed-effects modelsMethods in Ecology and Evolution 4:133–142https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2041-210x.2012.00261.x
- Can site and landscape-scale environmental attributes buffer bird populations against weather events?Ecography 37:872–882https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.00575
- Large extents of intensive land use limit community reorganization during climate warmingGlobal Change Biology 23:2272–2283https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13587
- Climate change meets habitat fragmentation: linking landscape and biogeographical scale levels in research and conservationBiological Conservation 117:285–297https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2003.12.008
- Biotic interactions are more often important at species’ warm versus cool range edgesEcology Letters 24:2427–2438https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13864
- Drivers of climate change impacts on bird communitiesJournal of Animal Ecology 84:943–954https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12364
- nlme: Linear and Nonlinear Mixed Effects ModelsR package version 3:1–162
- nlme: Linear and Nonlinear Mixed Effects ModelsR package version 3:1–162
- Habitat availability explains variation in climate-driven range shifts across multiple taxonomic groupsScientific Reports 9https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51582-2
- JAGS: A program for analysis of Bayesian graphical models using Gibbs samplingPaper presented at the Proceedings of the 3rd international workshop on distributed statistical computing
- rjags: Bayesian graphical models using MCMCR package version :4–14
- Climate change in our backyards: the reshuffling of North America’s winter bird communitiesGlobal Change Biology 21:572–585https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12740
- The climatic debt is growing in the understorey of temperate forests: Stand characteristics matterGlobal Ecology and Biogeography 30:1474–1487https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13312
- Farmland practices are driving bird population decline across EuropeProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 120https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2216573120
- A Bayesian state-space formulation of dynamic occupancy modelsEcology 88:1813–1823https://doi.org/10.1890/06-0669.1
- The ‘abundant centre’distribution: to what extent is it a biogeographical rule?Ecology Letters 5:137–147https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1461-0248.2002.00297.x
- Simple means to improve the interpretability of regression coefficientsMethods in Ecology and Evolution 1:103–113https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2041-210X.2010.00012.x
- Should we use proportional sampling for species-area studies?Journal of Biogeography 31:1219–1226https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01113.x
- Functional and phylogenetic structure of island bird communitiesJournal of Animal Ecology 86:532–542https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12650
- The importance of accounting for imperfect detection when estimating functional and phylogenetic community structureEcology 99:2103–2112https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2438
- Turnover of breeding bird communities on islands in an inundated lakeJournal of Biogeography 41:2283–2292https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12379
- R2jags: Using R to Run ‘JAGS’R package version 0.7–1
- Extinction risk from climate change is reduced by microclimatic bufferingNature Climate Change 8:713–717https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0231-9
- Regional variation in climate change winners and losers highlights the rapid loss of cold-dwelling speciesDiversity and Distributions 22:468–480https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12412
- R: A Language and Environment for Statistical ComputingIn. Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing
- Range retractions and extinction in the face of climate warmingTrends in Ecology & Evolution 21:415–416https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2006.05.012
- Birds extend their ranges northwardsNature 399:213–213https://doi.org/10.1038/20335
- Detecting range shifts from historical species occurrences: new perspectives on old dataTrends in ecology & evolution 24:625–633https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2009.05.009
- Cryptic loss of montane avian richness and high community turnover over 100 yearsEcology 94:598–609https://doi.org/10.1890/12-0928.1
- Rapid responses of British butterflies to opposing forces of climate and habitat changeNature 414:65–69https://doi.org/10.1038/35102054
- Forest microclimate dynamics drive plant responses to warmingScience 368:772–775https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aba6880
Article and author information
Author information
Version history
- Sent for peer review:
- Preprint posted:
- Reviewed Preprint version 1:
- Reviewed Preprint version 2:
- Reviewed Preprint version 3:
- Version of Record published:
Copyright
© 2024, Liu et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
Metrics
- views
- 623
- downloads
- 69
- citations
- 0
Views, downloads and citations are aggregated across all versions of this paper published by eLife.