Study: Climate Change is Making Some Birds Uglier

Collared flycatcher (Ficedula albicollis)
Collared flycatcher (Ficedula albicollis). By https://www.flickr.com/photos/andrej_chudyhttps://www.flickr.com/photos/andrej_chudy/6260779290, CC BY-SA 2.0, Link

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

A new study claims climate stress is making some birds lose their mating ornamentation.

Climate change ecology: Hot under the collar

A 34-year study of collared flycatchers demonstrates that males are evolving to be less ornamented in response to rising temperatures.

For male collared flycatchers (Ficedula albicollis; pictured), having a large white patch on your forehead signals that you are a fearsome rival, and an attractive mate. But while large patch size was thought to give males an evolutionary advantage, it seems that climate change is turning this advantage on its head. In this issue of Nature Ecology & Evolution, Evans and Gustafsson report that the collared flycatcher’s forehead patch has declined in size because large patch males have lower fitness as the climate warms.

In many animals, males have ornamental features that are used to attract mates, and to signal to rivals during territorial interactions. While these ‘sexually selected’ ornaments can increase a male’s mating success, they can also impose a variety of costs on their bearers. Ornaments such as bright colouration can increase susceptibility to predators, or they can predispose males to competing for larger territories and more mates, at the expense of providing care for their offspring. As a result, ornamental traits are hypothesized to evolve only when the benefits of being ornamented outweigh the costs.

While the authors demonstrate a strong link between climate warming and selection on male ornamentation, they were not able to determine the mechanism behind this link.

Certainly, there are good theoretical reasons why climatic changes could influence animal ornamentation across the globe. As Evans and Gustafsson show, some ornaments will decline in response to environmental change, and it is conceivable that some ornaments could disappear altogether. However, there are also reasons to predict that climate change will drive the evolution of new, or exaggerated, ornaments in some species. Just as climate change will lead to winners and losers in terms of species’ abundance and distribution, it seems it may also lead to winners and losers in the global beauty pageant.

Read more: http://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-016-0060

The abstract of the study referenced by the press release;

Climate change upends selection on ornamentation in a wild bird

Simon R. Evans & Lars Gustafsson

Secondary sexual traits have high heritabilities and are exposed to strong, environmentally sensitive selection, and so are expected to evolve rapidly in response to sustained environmental change. We examine the eco-evolutionary dynamics of ornament expression in a long-term study population of collared flycatchers, Ficedula albicollis, in which forehead patch size, which positively influences male reproductive success, declined markedly over 34 years. Annual fitness selection on forehead patch size switched from positive to negative during the study, a reversal that is accounted for by rising spring temperatures at the breeding site: highly ornamented males were selectively favoured following cold breeding seasons but selected against following warm breeding seasons. An ‘individual animal model’ describes a decline in the genetic values of breeding males during the study, which simulations showed was unlikely to result from drift alone. These results are thus consistent with adaptive evolution of a sexually selected trait in response to climate change.

Long-term population studies have provided many examples of traits undergoing substantial phenotypic change in response to climate change. While these are seemingly indicative of contemporary evolution, robust demonstrations of adaptation are conspicuously rare, particularly in light of studies showing that phenotypic change does not equate to genetic change. While direct demonstrations of shifts in allele frequencies in response to climate change have emerged, many phenotypes do not follow simple Mendelian patterns of inheritance and are instead influenced by innumerable loci, each of small effect, such that studying individual loci will provide little information about the evolutionary dynamics governing the trait. Quantitative genetics resolves this apparent impasse by providing an analytical framework that treats the summed contribution of all loci as the unit of interest, an approach that has proven highly successful in predicting the responses of domestic populations to artificial selection. In particular, the ‘individual animal model’ estimates the genetic value of each individual in the sample population, providing a robust methodology for quantifying evolutionary change in the wild. However, published demonstrations of adaptive evolution of quantitative traits in response to climate change have been conspicuously absent since the realization that earlier applications are strongly anticonservative.

Research on the evolutionary impact of climate change in vertebrates has centred on phenological traits yet selection on secondary sexual traits is highly environmentally sensitive, which, combined with their high heritabilities14, would seem to make them ideal traits for observing evolutionary responses to climate change. However, while comparative analyses support theoretical predictions that secondary sexual traits are evolutionarily labile, robust demonstrations of their contemporary evolution in the wild are scant, being limited to discrete traits18 or populations exposed to severe artificial selection. Indeed, the apparent evolutionary stasis of secondary sexual traits has been the subject of much speculation, despite the scarcity of demonstrations of contemporary evolution in the wild for quantitative traits in genera.

We studied secondary sexual trait expression in a nestbox-breeding population of male collared flycatchers, Ficedula albicollis, from 1981 to 2014. The sex-limited, white forehead patch (Fig. 1) is an established ornamental trait: males expressing a large forehead patch have a competitive advantage over rival males22,23. Forehead patch size is heritable and the possibility that evolutionary change might underlie the decline in phenotypic expression (Fig. 2a) has been raised previously. We therefore assessed selection on forehead patch size and used individual-level quantitative genetic modelling to infer the evolutionary change in ornamentation.

Read more: http://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-016-0039

I can’t help thinking the inference drawn by this study is weak. The study does not identify a mechanism by which a slight change of temperature increased stress. The study authors themselves suggested that in some cases, warming could lead to more exaggerated mating ornamentation. Even if we accept that the study authors are correct about collared flycatchers, by the study author’s own words it isn’t possible to generalise this finding into a prediction about all bird species. I suspect there are many potential issues other than a slight change in temperature, which could stress an isolated population of birds.

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Ore-gonE Left
January 24, 2017 7:51 pm

I always thought my gray hair was the result of my divorce. Silly me, I now learn. from a taxpayer funded study by “scientists”, that it was the damn climate! Who can I sue????????

Myron Mesecke
January 24, 2017 7:53 pm

Perhaps the females have gotten ‘easy’ so the males don’t have to look as good.

nn
Reply to  Myron Mesecke
January 24, 2017 8:02 pm

Friends with “benefits” leads to lower expectations. A form of polygamy without the commitment.

KevinK
January 24, 2017 7:54 pm

Might I suggest an occasional topical application of “Rogaine” for our romantically challenged feathered friends……
Heck, it’s worked wonders for the “Bald” Eagle here in the States…..
The Bald Eagle is reaching population saturation (because of some serious “Hanky Panky”) in many places where it was extirpated as recently as 20 years ago….. That would be about the length of the “pause”, perhaps the pause caused Bald Eagles to repopulate areas ???
Disclaimer: I do not work for the “Rogaine” folks…..
\sarc off
Who (without others money) has the time to follow the extent of the ornamental plumage of one species of bird for 37 years ????
Cheers, KevinK ( Amateur Ornithologist with a “life list” exceeding 1700 species on 6 continents )

nn
January 24, 2017 8:00 pm

The thesis is that catastrophic anthropogenic climate change causes avian aesthetic changes that exceed a tolerable social cost leading to increased Planning. Humans in first-world nations suffer from the same dilemma, but it well precedes modern temperature records and computer models that suggest a progressive warming. Perhaps the birds just want to have fun, evolving into diversified social classes different from their parents and grandparents.

John Robertson
January 24, 2017 9:00 pm

Or perhaps,that larger white patch makes these birds easier to see for our furry friend,the domestic house cat.?
Or makes the bored killers see the bird as a more fun victim?
Evolution in just 34 years?
Climate change does so much…

Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  John Robertson
January 24, 2017 9:13 pm

It takes 30 years of weather to get a single climate datum point.
So, their evolution was over a 4 year period, I think.

January 24, 2017 9:08 pm

Study: Climate Change is Making Some Birds Uglier
Guest essay by Eric Worrall A new study claims climate stress is making some birds lose their mating ornamentation. Climate change ecology: Hot under the collar A 34-year study of collared flycatchers demonstrates that males are evolving to be less ornamented in response to rising temperatures. For male collared flycatchers (Ficedula albicollis; pictured), having a…
Continue reading →
Why should I continue reading?

Peter Morris
January 24, 2017 9:54 pm

Oh, well. Dang.
That does it. I’m all on board the CO2 is evil train now. Can’t have my grandkids looking at ugly birds.

January 24, 2017 10:05 pm

Dear oh dear. If there is a correlation with global temperatures, there is just as strong a correlation with the price of rum in Jamaica or the salaries of Presbyterian ministers in Nova Scotia. All have gone up (reportedly) in the last 100 years. What publicity-seeking garbage.

PiperPaul
January 24, 2017 10:15 pm
Jerry Henson
Reply to  PiperPaul
January 25, 2017 3:59 am

PP, the golden plumage obviously crowns a smart, aggressive, and dominate
male.

wws
Reply to  Jerry Henson
January 25, 2017 2:53 pm

If you have ever seen one of those pheasants live (quite rare in this country) you realize it is quite possible the most stunningly beautiful bird in creation. I think it even outdoes the BIrds of Paradise.

Richard
January 24, 2017 11:24 pm

Meanwhile in the Homo sapiens world humans are living longer and healthier lives, and suffering less from extreme weather.

Stephen
January 24, 2017 11:48 pm

This could be caused by interbreeding, some of the birds I see in our town sure are ugly but that has always been the case nothing to do with global warming as it goes right back to the stone age. {Sark} not sure about the feathered variety though.

Streetcred
Reply to  Stephen
January 25, 2017 1:27 am

Must be all the ‘hot air’ that is making demo-KratZ birds so UGLY !!

Streetcred
January 25, 2017 1:26 am

That’s funny, we have some of the most beautiful parrots in the hottest regions of Australia!

Nash
January 25, 2017 1:26 am

Ain’t ugly in the eyes of the beholder? Examples …. Whoopi, Rosanne, and Michael Moore are ugly in my eyes, but liberals think they are beautiful.

Bruce Cobb
January 25, 2017 4:14 am

Well, we know that “climate change” is making birds angry, so ugly in addition might not be such a stretch:
http://images.techtimes.com/data/images/full/220418/angry-birds-red-for-the-united-nations.jpg

January 25, 2017 4:56 am

And would somebody explain to me how having a larger heat-reflecting white spot makes one less fit in higher temperatures? The take home lesson from this would seem, rather, to be that the birds have so little trouble from hotter weather that they can afford to go without their white spot.

January 25, 2017 4:58 am

Some birds can look quite nice after a few pints. I must admit I have never gone to bed with an ugly bird, but I sure woke up with a few.

MarkW
January 25, 2017 6:13 am

The most colorful birds are all found in the tropics.

Eric Selin
January 25, 2017 6:31 am

I wonder what sorts of stress …assuming there is stress involved, would lead stressed animals to become less competitive in successful mating? It seems unlikely to me.

Greg in Texas
January 25, 2017 6:49 am

They first need to prove their premise, as stated in the first sentence. (“Secondary sexual traits have high heritabilities and are exposed to strong, environmentally sensitive selection, and so are expected to evolve rapidly in response to sustained environmental change.”)

TA
January 25, 2017 7:45 am

“A 34-year study of collared flycatchers demonstrates that males are evolving to be less ornamented in response to rising temperatures.”
Well, this can’t be a serious problem because if the heat actually causes these changes, then this has happened before, since it was just as hot or hotter back in the 1930’s as it is today, so that must mean that the flycatchers lose their attractive plumage when the heat is on, but when it start cooling off, like it did from 1940 to 1975, the flycatcher must regenerate its attractive plumage, or else we wouldn’t be seeing them losing it again today, it would have already been lost in the 1930’s. Right? Where am I going wrong here?

Mickey Reno
January 25, 2017 7:57 am

Hey, they said the secret words, “climate change.” You say the secret word, you win the money. Them’s the rules.
https://youtu.be/OFBT7X0bMEs?t=379

January 25, 2017 7:58 am

One of the long-standing bird issues here in AK are birds with deformed beaks. The cause was usually blamed on man-made global warming due to CO2 emissions with all the expected hand wringing and calls for immediate action.
One of the things found in the birds was a high level of a previously unknown virus. One of our outdoors writers (who does pretty good local stuff) suggests that the virus is spread by bird feeders (which we have a lot of), which allow the birds with deformed beaks to eat and survive when they normally wouldn’t. He used a line in his piece that we are literally loving our birds to death. Doesn’t have anything to do with climate change or global warming at all. Sometimes making things easier for the wildlife harms them more than not doing it. Cheers –
https://craigmedred.news/2017/01/16/loved-to-death/

Bruce Cobb
January 25, 2017 8:18 am

I believe climate change is responsible for the large number of dead parrots, particularly the Russian Blues. This idea that they are just “pining for the fjords” is just silly. A group has formed to help highlight the issue, called The Dead Parrots Society”.

BallBounces
January 25, 2017 8:21 am

Science is clearly over-funded. This paper is ground-zero.

James
January 25, 2017 8:39 am

In as much as evolution is really no more than simple adaptation, I have no issues with this nonsense.