“…In both high and low latitudes, temperature has been shown to be an important driver of the demographic rates of birds (Doyle et al, 2020; Dybala et al, 2013; Santisteban et al, 2012; Woodworth et al, 2018). While the magnitude of global warming—0.18°C per decade (NOAA, 2019)—has been comparatively small relative to the range of temperatures that most tropical birds typically experience over a lifetime, a year, or even a day, the impact of rapid change in mean annual temperature over the last half‐century has, nonetheless, had marked effects on the distributions (Freeman, Lee‐Yaw, et al, 2018; Freeman, Scholer, et al, 2018; Neate‐Clegg et al, 2020), community structure (Blake & Loiselle, 2015; Latta et al, 2011; Stouffer et al, 2020), and demographic rates (Srinivasan & Wilcove, 2020; Woodworth et al, 2018) of tropical birds. Most of these documented responses of tropical birds to global warming are almost certainly a result of temperature‐induced changes in biotic interactions (Lister & Garcia, 2018; Santisteban et al, 2012) such as fruiting phenology (Chapman et al, 2005), prey availability (Lister & Garcia, 2018), or predator activity (Cox et al, 2013) rather than temperature per se (Londoño et al, 2017).…”