Inter-Research > CR > v49 > n2 > p131-141  
CR
Climate Research


via Mailchimp

CR 49:131-141 (2011)  -  DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/cr01025

Climate change and the long-term northward shift in the African wintering range of the barn swallow Hirundo rustica

Roberto Ambrosini1,*, Diego Rubolini2, Anders Pape Møller3, Luciano Bani4, Jacquie Clark5, Zsolt Karcza6, Didier Vangeluwe7, Chris du Feu8, Fernando Spina9, Nicola Saino2

1Dipartimento di Biotecnologie e Bioscienze, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, piazza della Scienza 2, 20126 Milano, Italy
2Dipartimento de Biologia, Università degli Studi di Milano, via Celoria 26, 20133 Milano, Italy
3Laboratoire d’Ecologie, Systématique et Evolution, CNRS UMR 8079, Université Paris-Sud, Bâtiment 362, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France
4Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Ambiente e del Territorio, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, piazza della Scienza 1, 20126 Milano, Italy
5British Trust for Ornithology (BTO), The Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk IP24 2PU, UK
6Madárgyuruzési Központ / Hungarian Bird Ringing Centre - MME / BirdLife Hungary, Költo u. 21, 1121 Budapest, Hungary
7Belgian Ringing Centre, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, 29 rue Vautier, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
8EURING Data bank, BTO, Thetford, Norfolk IP24 2PU, UK
9ISPRA, Via Cà Fornacetta 9, 40064 Ozzano dell’Emilia (BO), Italy

ABSTRACT: Recent, unprecedentedly rapid climate change has frequently been invoked as the cause of changes in the phenology of bird migration as well as population decline. Birds would be expected to respond to milder climatic conditions at their breeding grounds by reducing the length of their migration. Here, we exploit the largest ringing recovery database available for a ­long-distance migrant passerine bird, the barn swallow Hirundo rustica, spanning 1912−2008 and including recoveries from sub-Saharan Africa, to show that this species has shifted its wintering grounds northwards at a rate of 3 to 9 km yr−1. This shift occurred consistently in the 2 geographical clusters of barn swallows that could be identified on the basis of their migratory connectivity and could bedetected after accounting for possible differential changes in recovery probability among geographical areas. Analyses of trends in climatic conditions at the wintering grounds, based on time series of rainfall and temperature anomalies, showed that this northward shift should have caused a progressively larger proportion of barn swallows to winter in drier or warmer areas, i.e. where primary productivity is lower and therefore ecological conditions for ­wintering are less favourable. This shift, which may have contributed to the general decline in breeding barn swallow populations, may be due to the combined effects of selection for earlier arrival at the breeding grounds because of milder ­climatic conditions in the breeding areas, and constraints in other stages of the annual life cycle (e.g. timing of the annual moult) that prevent earlier departure from the wintering grounds.


KEY WORDS: Barn swallow · Bird migration · Connectivity · EURING swallow project · Phenology · Wintering range


Full text in pdf format
Cite this article as: Ambrosini R, Rubolini D, Møller AP, Bani L and others (2011) Climate change and the long-term northward shift in the African wintering range of the barn swallow Hirundo rustica. Clim Res 49:131-141. https://doi.org/10.3354/cr01025

Export citation
Share:    Facebook - - linkedIn

 Previous article Next article