Parasites require synchrony with their hosts so if host timing changes with climate change, some parasites may decline and eventually go extinct. Residents and short-distance migrant hosts of the brood parasitic common cuckoo, Cuculus canorus, have advanced their phenology in response to climate change more than long-distance migrants, including the cuckoo itself. Because different parts of Europe show different degrees of climate change, we predicted that use of residents or short-distance migrants as hosts should have declined in areas with greater increase in spring temperature. Comparing relative frequency of parasitism of the two host categories in 23 European countries before and after 1990, when spring temperatures in many areas had ...
1. In the context of global change, modifications in winter conditions may disrupt the seasonal phen...
Ecological systems are responding to changes in climate, and due to their ubiquitous nature, parasit...
In some hosts of avian brood parasites, several populations apparently escape parasitism, while othe...
Parasites require synchrony with their hosts so if host timing changes with climate change, some par...
Phenological responses to climate change vary among taxa and across trophic levels. This can lead to...
Matching the timing of spring arrival to the breeding grounds with hosts and prey is crucial for mig...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Climate change potentially has important effects on distribution, abundance...
Climate change potentially has important effects on distribution, abundance, transmission and virule...
Background: Climate change potentially has important effects on distribution, abundance, transmissio...
Analysis of spring arrival dates in North Norway showed advanced arrival of the Common Cuckoo Cuculu...
In the period 2001–2014 we studied Common Cuckoo Cuculus canorus brood parasitism on Meadow Pipits A...
Although parasites and their hosts often coexist in a set of environmentally differentiated populati...
Parasitoids are key regulators of the population dynamics of their arthropod hosts, are integral to ...
We tested the prediction that at higher latitudes there will be an increase in the number hosts per ...
Research examining the causal relationships between climate, climate change and parasite ecology is ...
1. In the context of global change, modifications in winter conditions may disrupt the seasonal phen...
Ecological systems are responding to changes in climate, and due to their ubiquitous nature, parasit...
In some hosts of avian brood parasites, several populations apparently escape parasitism, while othe...
Parasites require synchrony with their hosts so if host timing changes with climate change, some par...
Phenological responses to climate change vary among taxa and across trophic levels. This can lead to...
Matching the timing of spring arrival to the breeding grounds with hosts and prey is crucial for mig...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Climate change potentially has important effects on distribution, abundance...
Climate change potentially has important effects on distribution, abundance, transmission and virule...
Background: Climate change potentially has important effects on distribution, abundance, transmissio...
Analysis of spring arrival dates in North Norway showed advanced arrival of the Common Cuckoo Cuculu...
In the period 2001–2014 we studied Common Cuckoo Cuculus canorus brood parasitism on Meadow Pipits A...
Although parasites and their hosts often coexist in a set of environmentally differentiated populati...
Parasitoids are key regulators of the population dynamics of their arthropod hosts, are integral to ...
We tested the prediction that at higher latitudes there will be an increase in the number hosts per ...
Research examining the causal relationships between climate, climate change and parasite ecology is ...
1. In the context of global change, modifications in winter conditions may disrupt the seasonal phen...
Ecological systems are responding to changes in climate, and due to their ubiquitous nature, parasit...
In some hosts of avian brood parasites, several populations apparently escape parasitism, while othe...