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Parallel sessions 21E 2: Contributed session: Global change II
Time:
Friday, 21/June/2024:
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Session Chair: Michele Lussu
Location:Room E - Belmeloro Complex
Via Beniamino Andreatta, 8, 40126 Bologna
Presentations
Phenology mediates population responses of animals to temperature globally
Viktoriia Radchuk1, Carys Jones2, Nina McLean10, Liam Bailey1, Guillaume Chero1, Bernt-Erik Saether3, Anne Charmantier4, Celine Teplitsky4, Alexandre Courtiol1, Stephanie Kramer-Schadt1, Jean Clobert4, Holger Schielzeth5, Hugh Drummond6, Lewis Sue7, Ally Phillimore8, Erik Matthysen9, Thomas Banitz11, Stefan Vriend10, Katharine Keogan8, Ulrich Brose5, Stephanie Jenouvrier12, Steve Beissinger13, Marcel Visser10, Thomas Reed14, Martijn van de Pol15
1Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Germany; 2University of Oxford; 3Norwegian University of Science and Technology; 4CNRS; 5iDiv; 6Universidad National Autonoma de Mexico; 7UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology; 8University of Edinburgh; 9University of Antwerpen; 10Wageningen University; 11UFZ; 12Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; 13University of Berkley; 14University College Cork; 15James Cook University
Phenological response of Batesian mimicry complex (Bumblebee - hoverflies)
Blessing Chidinma Umeh1, Markus Sydenham2, Gunnar Milkasen-kvifte1, Michael Patten1
1Nord University, Norway; 2Norsk institutt for naturforskning (NINA)
The role of ecological and life-history traits in mediating spatial responses to global change in mammal species
Andrea Cristiano1,2, Michael Jeffries1, Frazer Coomber3,4, Fiona Mathews3,4, Andrew J. Suggitt1
1Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; 2Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy; 3Mammal Society, Blandford Forum, UK; 4University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
Short-distance migratory birds with faster range shifts show delays in their passage dates