Transcript poster

Climate change and the response of phenology of Great Tit , Collared Flycatcher, Summer Oak and
herbivorous caterpillars during 1961 – 2007 in the Czech Republic
Acknowledgements: The study was
supported by the project Grant Agency
of the Czech Republic (no. 521/08/1682),
Research plan No. MSM6215648905
“Biological and technological aspects of
sustainability of controlled ecosystems
and their adaptability to climate change”
and KONTAKT OC 187 (linked to COST
734).
Lenka Bartošová (1), Miroslav Trnka (1), Zdeněk Bauer (1), Petr Štěpánek (2), Jana Bauerová (1), Martin Možný (3), Zdeněk Žalud (1)
(1) Institute for Agrosystems and Bioclimatology, Mendel University of Agriculture and Forestry Brno, Czech Republic, [email protected]
(2) Department of Climatology and Meteorology, Czech Hydrometeorological Institute Brno, Czech Republic
(3) Agrometeorological observatory in Doksany, Czech Hydrometeorological Institute, Doksany, Czech Republic
RESULTS
INTRODUCTION
On this poster we present phenology of Great Tit,
Collared Flycatcher, Summer Oak and herbivorous
caterpillars within flood plain forest ecosystem during
1961 and 2007. Phenophases of species mentioned
above have shifted during last 47 years to the earlier
time and therefore the study focuses on the mutual
influence of shifts in phenology of individual species in
this simplified trophic chain and its overall stabillity.
AIMS
1. shifting of phenophases
Onset of phenophases of a) Summer Oak where
the dashed line is bud bursting and continuous
line is full foliage; b) Great Tit, for both bird
populations the dashed line is FLD (first laying
date) and solid line is MLD (mean laying date); c)
peak of caterpillar, where the dashed line is
start and solid line is end of excrement falldown; d)Collared Flycatcher
2. coherency analysis
Coherency
analysis
between
accumulated
maximum
temperatures above 8°C and Summer Oak bud burst, Great Tit
MLD, start of caterpillar peak season and Collared Flycatcher
MLD. The sum of maximum temperatures was accumulated for
period of Summer Oak: January 1 – April 25, Great Tit: January 1
– April 10, caterpillar: January 1 – April 30, Collared Flycatcher:
March 1 – May 5.
4. onset of phenophases
Onset of phenological stages during individual decades of the
record. The white bar indicates range of mean and ± st. dev.
with mean value being depicted by vertical line. The extend of
black bars indicate minimum and maximum values in the
individual periods.
- to find out how shifting of phenophases affect
trophic chain of observed species
- to analyse if happen mistiming of individual
phenophases
- to clarify how temperature in particular period
correlate with development of phenophases
STUDY AREA
- 4 research plots of biogeocenoses group Ulmifraxineta carpini
- 3776 pairs of Great Tit, 3437 pairs of Collared
Flycatcher
- 2 species of caterpillars: Winter Moth (Operophtera
brumata) and Tortrix Moth (Tortrix viridana)
- bud break and full foliage of Summer Oak
METHODOLOGY
phenological
input data
meteorological
parameters
3. coherency analysis II
Coherency analysis of selected pairs of phenophases at selected
location. 1) Summer Oak bud burst – beginning of caterpillar
season; 2) Summer Oak full foliage – end of caterpillar season; 3)
Summer oak bud burst – Great Tit MLD; 4) beginning of
caterpillar season – Great Tit MLD, 5) end of caterpillar season –
Great Tit MLD; 6) beginning of caterpillar season – Collared
Flycatcher MLD; 7) end of caterpillar season – Collared Flycatcher
MLD; 8) Great Tit MLD – Collared Flycatcher MLD.
CONCLUSION
t-test, Kendall Rank Correlation test for
significance in trends
coherency analyses – at 95% and 99%
confidence levels for pheno and meteo
series
Pearson and Spearman correlation
coefficient for pairs of pheno stages
- results for sum of maximum daily temperatures above 8°C and for onset
of phenological stages of all the species studied exceeded the 95% and 99%
confidence levels for frequencies above 20 years
- the mutual timing of the phenological stages in simplified trophic chain do
not be affected by shifting of phenophases. Phenophases are separating or
overlaying in some years but there is no disruption of the food chain. There
has been a consistent shift towards earlier onset of individual phenophases
over the last 47 years
- Summer Oak bud bursting has shifted on average by 7.9 days and full
foliage by 8.9 days, MLD has advanced on average by 7.8 days for the Great
Tit and by 8.7 days for Collared Flycatcher and the activity of caterpillars has
advanced by 8.7 days