Glacier
lilies and broad-tailed hummingbirds out of sync
The glacier lily as it's called, is a
tall, willowy plant that graces mountain meadows throughout western North
America. It flowers early in spring, when the first bumblebees and hummingbirds
appear.
Or did.
The lily, a plant that grows best on
subalpine slopes, is fast becoming a hothouse flower. In Earth's warming
temperatures, its first blooms appear some 17 days earlier than they did in the
1970s, scientists David Inouye and Amy McKinney of the University of Maryland
and colleagues have found.
The problem, say the biologists, with
the earlier timing of these first blooms is that the glacier lily is no longer
synchronized with the arrival of broad-tailed hummingbirds, which depend on
glacier lilies for nectar.
By the time the hummingbirds fly in,
many of the flowers have withered away, their nectar-laden blooms going with
them.
Broad-tailed hummingbirds migrate north
from Central America every spring to high-mountain breeding sites in the
western United States. The birds have only a short mountain summer to raise
their young. Male hummingbirds scout for territories before the first flowers
bloom.
But the time between the first
hummingbird and the first bloom has collapsed by 13 days over the past four
decades, say Inouye and McKinney. "In some years," says McKinney,
"the lilies have already bloomed by the time the first hummingbird lands."
The biologists calculate that if current
trends continue, in two decades the hummingbirds will miss the first flowers
entirely.
The results are reported in a paper in
the current issue of the journal Ecology. In addition to McKinney and Inouye,
co-authors of the paper are Paul CaraDonna of the University of Arizona; Billy
Barr of the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory in Crested Butte, Colo.; David
Bertelsen of the University of Arizona; and Nickolas Waser, affiliated with all
three institutions.
"Northern species, such as the
broad-tailed hummingbird, are most at risk of arriving at their breeding sites
after their key food resources are no longer available, yet ecologists predict
that species will move northward as climate warms," says Saran Twombly,
program director in the National Science Foundation's Division of Environmental
Biology, which funded the research.
"These conflicting pressures
challenge society to ensure that species don't soon find themselves without a
suitable place to live."
Broad-tailed hummingbirds that breed
farther south have fewer challenges.
"In Arizona, for example,"
says Inouye, "there's no obvious narrowing of the timing between the first
arriving males and the first blooms of, in this case, the nectar-containing Indian
paintbrush."
Higher latitudes may be more likely to
get out of sync ecologically because global warming is happening fastest there.
As the snow continues to melt earlier in
the spring, bringing earlier flowering, says Inouye, the mountains may come alive
with glacier lilies long before hummingbirds can complete their journey north.
"Where have all the flowers
gone?" then will be "where have all the hummingbirds gone?"
-NSF-
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