Data from: Regional variation in climate change alters the range-wide distribution of colour polymorphism in a wild bird
According to Gloger’s rule animal colouration is expected to be darker in wetter and warmer climates. Such environmental clines are predicted to occur in colour polymorphic species and to be shaped by selection if colour morphs represent adaptations to different environments. We studied if the distr...
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Zusammenfassung: | According to Gloger’s rule animal colouration is expected to be darker in
wetter and warmer climates. Such environmental clines are predicted to
occur in colour polymorphic species and to be shaped by selection if
colour morphs represent adaptations to different environments. We studied
if the distribution of the colour polymorphic tawny owl (Strix aluco)
morphs (a pheomelanic brown and a pale grey) across Europe follow the
predictions of Gloger’s rule and if there is a temporal change in the
geographical patterns corresponding to regional variations in climate
change. We used data on tawny owl museum skin specimen collections. First,
we investigated long-term spatiotemporal variation in the probability of
observing the colour morphs in different climate zones. Second, we studied
if the probability of observing the colour morphs was associated with
general climatic conditions. Third, we studied if weather fluctuations
prior the finding year of an owl explains colour morph in each climate
zone. The brown tawny owl morph was historically more common than the grey
morph in every studied climate zone. Over time the brown morph has become
rarer in the temperate and Mediterranean zone, whereas it has first become
rarer but then again more common in the boreal zone. Based on general
climatic conditions winter and summer temperature were positively and
negatively associated with proportion of brown morph, respectively. Winter
precipitation was negatively associated with proportion of brown morph.
The effects of five-year means of weather on the probability to observe a
brown morph differed between climate zones, indicating region dependent
effect of climate change and weather on tawny owl colouration. To
conclude, tawny owl colouration does not explicitly follow Gloger’s rule,
implying a time and space dependent complex system shaped by many factors.
We provide novel insights in how the geographic distribution of
pheomelanin-based colour polymorphism is changing. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.kkwh70s92 |