Extending Long‐Term Avian Studies Alters Temporal and Climate‐Driven Trend Conclusions
Irene Zanandrea, Juan Moreno, Alejandro Cantarero

TL;DR
Short-term studies of bird populations can lead to misleading conclusions about climate change impacts, which become clearer with long-term data.
Contribution
The study shows that extending data collection periods can significantly alter conclusions about population trends and climate responses.
Findings
Initial trends in reproductive parameters weaken, invert, or disappear with extended data.
Advancements in laying dates only become apparent after more than two decades of study.
Unexpected responses like delayed laying during hot periods were observed.
Abstract
Long‐term population studies are crucial for understanding the impacts of climate change on biodiversity; however, predictions based on short‐term data may be unreliable. Here, we analyse yearly averages of reproductive parameters (laying date, nestling condition, and female condition) of a Pied Flycatcher ( Ficedula hypoleuca ) population in central Spain across one, two, and three decades of study to evaluate how study duration affects conclusions about population trends. Our findings reveal that initial trends deduced from studies of shorter duration often weaken, invert, or disappear when extended durations are included. For example, advancements in laying dates only become apparent after more than two decades, while trends in nestling and female condition vanish over time. Additionally, we observed unexpected responses, such as delays in laying during exceptionally hot prelaying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAvian ecology and behavior · Species Distribution and Climate Change · Climate variability and models
