Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

Shrinking shorebird pays the bill for rapid Arctic warming while wintering in the tropics

13 May 2016
Red knot (c) Jan van de Kam

Red knots migrate between their breeding grounds in the Arctic and their wintering grounds in West Africa. Chicks currently born under rapidly warming conditions attain smaller sizes before migration starts, because they miss the insect peak. If they reach their wintering grounds in the tropics, they are faced with a second disadvantage: their shorter bills cannot reach their favourite shellfish food. This results in an evolutionary force towards smaller-sized birds with large bills.

These findings will be published Friday 13 May 2016 in Science by an international team of researchers from the Netherlands (NIOZ and Univ. Groningen), Australia, France, Poland and Russia.

Source: Press Release NIOZ Royal Netherlands Istitute for Sea Research

Last modified:13 March 2020 02.09 a.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 25 June 2024

    Heineken Young Scientists Award for Casper van der Kooi

    For his research in the field of Natural Sciences, Casper van der Kooi will receive the Heineken Young Scientists Award.

  • 24 June 2024

    Measuring stickiness

    Several plant species use tiny sticky droplets to attract and trap insects. These droplets form an ideal toxin-free insecticide that could be easily washed off of edible plants. Abinaya Arunachalam built a tool to measure the stickiness of...

  • 20 June 2024

    Kick-starting seagrass for a climate-proof sea

    Seagrasses have all but disappeared throughout the world, but these unique saltwater plants play a vital role in an ecosystem. On the occasion of the World Seagrass Conference this week (17-21 June) in Naples, Italy, the BBC premieres a mini...