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Dryad

Spatial variation in avian bill size is associated with temperature extremes in a major radiation of Australian passerines

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Mar 19, 2024 version files 2.30 MB

Abstract

Morphology is integral to body temperature regulation. Recent advances in understanding of thermal physiology suggest a role of the avian bill in thermoregulation. To explore the adaptive significance of bill size for thermoregulation we characterized relationships between bill size and climate extremes. Most previous studies have focussed on climate means, ignoring extremes, and do not reflect thermoregulatory costs experienced over shorter time scales. Using 79 species (9,847 museum specimens), we explore how bill size variation is associated with temperature extremes in a large and diverse radiation of Australasian birds, Meliphagides. Overall, across the continent, bill size variation was associated with both climate extremes and means and was most strongly associated with winter temperatures; associations at the level of climate zones differed from continent-wide associations, were complex and non-linear, yet consistent with physiology and a thermoregulatory role for avian bills. We provide strong evidence that climate extremes have contributed to the evolution of bill morphology in relation to thermoregulation and demonstrate the importance of including extremes to understand fine-scale trait variation across space. Increasing frequency and intensity of climate extremes, a signature of climate change, may lead to changes in bill size, but this is yet to be tested.