Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria

The Bergmann’s rule predicts that in endotherms, body sizes will differ with respect to thermal gradients. Larger bodied individuals will inhabit colder environments while in warmer environments, individuals will be smaller-bodied. This hypothesis has been proved and disproved many times due to inco...

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Main Authors: Barshep, Y., Awoyemi, A.G., Abalaka, J., Ottosson, U.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Frontiers Media 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120007
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author Barshep, Y.
Awoyemi, A.G.
Abalaka, J.
Ottosson, U.
author_browse Abalaka, J.
Awoyemi, A.G.
Barshep, Y.
Ottosson, U.
author_facet Barshep, Y.
Awoyemi, A.G.
Abalaka, J.
Ottosson, U.
author_sort Barshep, Y.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Bergmann’s rule predicts that in endotherms, body sizes will differ with respect to thermal gradients. Larger bodied individuals will inhabit colder environments while in warmer environments, individuals will be smaller-bodied. This hypothesis has been proved and disproved many times due to inconsistencies in body size differences along latitudinal gradients. We tested this hypothesis in 30 Afrotropical resident bird species inhabiting two vegetation types at different latitudes (southern guinea forests and northern savanna) and at different altitudes in Nigeria, West Africa. Using principal component analyses of body mass and wing length, the first principal component, the component of size, indicated that individuals in montane areas were larger than lowland populations in southern guinea forests. However, in the northern guinea savanna, there was no significant difference in body sizes between lowland and montane populations. General linear models show that body size increases as temperature decreases. In species found in both southern guinea forests and northern savanna (i.e., African Thrush Turdus pelios and Snowy-crowned Robin Chat Cossypha niveicapilla), variations in body sizes were significantly dependent on sites. Our study indicates that other macroscale factors such as vegetation and rainfall patterns might modulate conformity to Bergmann’s rule in Afrotropical environments.
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spelling CGSpace1200072025-12-08T10:29:22Z Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria Barshep, Y. Awoyemi, A.G. Abalaka, J. Ottosson, U. birds forests nigeria The Bergmann’s rule predicts that in endotherms, body sizes will differ with respect to thermal gradients. Larger bodied individuals will inhabit colder environments while in warmer environments, individuals will be smaller-bodied. This hypothesis has been proved and disproved many times due to inconsistencies in body size differences along latitudinal gradients. We tested this hypothesis in 30 Afrotropical resident bird species inhabiting two vegetation types at different latitudes (southern guinea forests and northern savanna) and at different altitudes in Nigeria, West Africa. Using principal component analyses of body mass and wing length, the first principal component, the component of size, indicated that individuals in montane areas were larger than lowland populations in southern guinea forests. However, in the northern guinea savanna, there was no significant difference in body sizes between lowland and montane populations. General linear models show that body size increases as temperature decreases. In species found in both southern guinea forests and northern savanna (i.e., African Thrush Turdus pelios and Snowy-crowned Robin Chat Cossypha niveicapilla), variations in body sizes were significantly dependent on sites. Our study indicates that other macroscale factors such as vegetation and rainfall patterns might modulate conformity to Bergmann’s rule in Afrotropical environments. 2022 2022-07-04T11:02:01Z 2022-07-04T11:02:01Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120007 en Open Access application/pdf Frontiers Media Barshep, Y., Awoyemi, A.G., Abalaka, J. & Ottosson, U. (2022). Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 10: 741755, 1-7.
spellingShingle birds
forests
nigeria
Barshep, Y.
Awoyemi, A.G.
Abalaka, J.
Ottosson, U.
Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria
title Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria
title_full Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria
title_fullStr Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria
title_short Bergmann's rule holds in birds inhabiting southern Guinea forests but not in the northern Savanna of Nigeria
title_sort bergmann s rule holds in birds inhabiting southern guinea forests but not in the northern savanna of nigeria
topic birds
forests
nigeria
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120007
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