Not exact matches
«Furnas and McGrann provide a textbook example of how to detect differences in the timing of nesting among
bird species using information on the peak date of singing derived from surveys and automated recorders,» according to UC Berkeley's Steve Beissinger, an expert on avian
phenology who was not involved in the study.
Same as with
phenology — we can't say what an individual tree or flower or
bird is going to do different as climate changes.
«Our study clearly showed that European migratory
bird species with declining breeding populations in Europe in the last decades (1990 — 2000) responded the least to recent climate change as reflected by the temporal trend in spring migration
phenology, or even delayed their timing of spring migration, whereas species with stable or increasing populations advanced migration.»