Behavioral heat-stress compensation in a cold-adapted ungulate:
forage-mediated responses to warming Alpine summers
Abstract
Alpine large herbivores have developed physiological and behavioral
mechanisms to cope with fluctuations in climate and resource
availability, but climate warming might induce behavioral maladaptation.
We verified this hypothesis in female Alpine ibex (Capra ibex) by
modelling seasonal and daily movement and activity patterns in function
of temperature and vegetation productivity, based on bio-logging data
and climate change projections. In late spring, ibex moved upslope,
tracking the green-wave in plant phenology. Ibex sharply decreased diel
activity above a threshold mean daily temperature of 13°C, indicating
thermal stress, but compensating behaviorally by foraging earlier at
dawn, and later at dusk, and by moving upslope higher than on cooler
days. This temperature threshold will be exceeded more than three times
as often under climate change projections. In such scenarios, the
imperative requirement for thermal shelter may force Alpine ibex towards
topographic edges, impacting individual performance and population
distribution of this emblematic mountain ungulate.