Effects of climate variation on bird escape distances modulate community responses to global change Díaz, M. Ibáñez Álamo, Juan Diego Warm thanks to Jacqui Sykoff for substantially improving the readability of former versions of the manuscript. GM was supported by the Hungarian Ministry for Innovation and Technology within the framework of the Thematic Excellence Programme 2020 (TKP2020-IKA-12, TKP2020-NKA-16).. KT was supported by institutional research funding IUT (34-8) of the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research. This paper is a contribution to the project URBILAND (PID2019-107423GA-I00/SRA 1013039/501100011033), funded by the Spanish Research Agency. Climate and land use are rapidly changing environmental conditions. Behavioral responses to such global perturbations can be used to incorporate interspecific interactions into predictive models of population responses to global change. Flight initiation distance (FID) reflects antipredator behaviour defined as the distance at which an individual takes flight when approached by a human, under standardized conditions. This behavioural trait results from a balance between disturbance, predation risk, food availability and physiological needs, and it is related to geographical range and population trends in European birds. Using 32,145 records of flight initiation distances for 229 bird species during 2006-2019 in 24 European localities, we show that FIDs decreased with increasing temperature and precipitation, as expected if foraging success decreased under warm and humid conditions. Trends were further altered by latitude, urbanisation and body mass, as expected if climate effects on FIDs were mediated by food abundance and need, differing according to position in food webs, supporting foraging models. This provides evidence for a role of behavioural responses within food webs on how bird populations and communities are affected by global change. 2021-07-15T11:22:36Z 2021-07-15T11:22:36Z 2021-06-18 journal article Díaz, M... [et al.]. Effects of climate variation on bird escape distances modulate community responses to global change. Sci Rep 11, 12826 (2021). [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92273-1] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/69725 10.1038/s41598-021-92273-1 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ open access Atribución 3.0 España Nature