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Stable understory microclimates within undisturbed rainforests are often considered refugia against climate change. However, this assumption contrasts with emerging evidence of Neotropical bird population declines in intact rainforests. We assessed the vulnerability of resident rainforest birds to climatic variability, focusing on dry season severity characterized by hotter temperatures and reduced rainfall. Analyzing 4264 individual bird captures over 27 years, we found that harsher Amazonian dry seasons significantly reduced apparent survival for 24 of 29 species, with longer-lived species being more strongly affected. Our model predicted that a 1°C increase in average dry season temperature would reduce the mean apparent survival of the understory bird community by 63%. These findings directly link climate change to declining bird survival in the Amazon, challenging the notion that pristine rainforests can fully protect their biodiversity under increasingly severe climate conditions.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available January 31, 2026
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Species‐specific phenological responses to changing climate are reshuffling the timing of species interactions, however we do not fully understand the consequences of these changes for species' population dynamics and community composition. In this study, we experimentally manipulated the timing of germination for five annual plant species from southern California and used pairwise competition experiments and coexistence theory to quantify how phenological shifts may impact species interactions and coexistence. We found that phenological shifts may help promote coexistence when they confer an advantage for competitively inferior species, but in other cases promote dominance by competitively superior species. Earlier germination generally increased species' performance relative to competitors, but the relative changes in intra‐and inter‐specific interactions caused more complex effects on niche and fitness differences. Phenological differences tended to reduce stabilising niche differences for many species pairs and reduced overall coexistence probabilities. Synthesis. While phenological differences among species have typically been considered a form of niche partitioning, it seems increasingly likely that phenological offsets could destabilise species coexistence. The net effects of changing phenology on species coexistence will depend on the complex combinations of effects on intra‐ and inter‐specific interactions, which remain challenging to predict.more » « less
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Major theories regarding microbe‐mediated plant community dynamics assume that plant species cultivate distinct microbial communities. However, few studies empirically assess the role of species‐associated microbial community dissimilarity in plant competitive dynamics. In this study, we paired a competition experiment between eight annual forbs with characterisation of species‐associated fungal communities to assess whether mycobiome dissimilarity is associated with pairwise competitive dynamics.more » « less
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