6 research outputs found
Constructing and evaluating a continentâwide migratory songbird network across the annual cycle
Determining how migratory animals are spatially connected between breeding and nonâbreeding periods is essential for predicting the effects of environmental change and for developing optimal conservation strategies. Yet, despite recent advances in tracking technology, we lack comprehensive information on the spatial structure of migratory networks across a speciesâ range, particularly for smallâbodied, longâdistance migratory animals. We constructed a migratory network for a songbird and used networkâbased metrics to characterize the spatial structure and prioritize regions for conservation. The network was constructed using yearâround movements derived from 133 archival lightâlevel geolocators attached to Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) originating from 12 breeding sites across their North American breeding range. From these breeding sites, we identified 10 autumn stopover nodes (regions) in North America, 13 nonâbreeding nodes located around the Gulf of Mexico, Mexico, Florida, and the Caribbean, and 136 unique edges (migratory routes) connecting nodes. We found strong migratory connectivity between breeding and autumn stopover sites and moderate migratory connectivity between the breeding and nonâbreeding sites. We identified three distinct âcommunitiesâ of nodes that corresponded to western, central, and eastern North American flyways. Several regions were important for maintaining network connectivity, with South Florida and Louisiana as the top ranked nonâbreeding nodes and the Midwest as the top ranked stopover node. We show that migratory songbird networks can have both a high degree of mixing between seasons yet still show regionally distinct migratory flyways. Such information will be crucial for accurately predicting factors that limit and regulate migratory songbirds throughout the annual cycle. Our study highlights how networkâbased metrics can be valuable for identifying overall network structure and prioritizing specific regions within a network for conserving a wide variety of migratory animals
Data from: A range-wide domino effect and resetting of the annual cycle in a migratory songbird
Latitudinal differences in timing of breeding are well documented but how such differences carry over to influence timing of events in the annual cycle of migratory birds is not well understood. We examined geographic variation in timing of events throughout the year using light-level geolocator tracking data from 133 migratory tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) originating from 12 North American breeding populations. A swallowâs breeding latitude influenced timing of breeding, which then carried over to affect breeding ground departure. This resulted in subsequent effects on the arrival and departure schedules at fall stopover locations and timing of arrival at non-breeding locations. This âdomino effectâ between timing events was no longer apparent by the time individuals departed for spring migration. Our range-wide analysis demonstrates the lasting impact breeding latitude can have on migration schedules but also highlights how such timing relationships can reset when individuals reside at non-breeding sites for extended periods of time
Constructing and evaluating a continentâwide migratory songbird network across the annual cycle
Determining how migratory animals are spatially connected between breeding and nonâbreeding periods is essential for predicting the effects of environmental change and for developing optimal conservation strategies. Yet, despite recent advances in tracking technology, we lack comprehensive information on the spatial structure of migratory networks across a speciesâ range, particularly for smallâbodied, longâdistance migratory animals. We constructed a migratory network for a songbird and used networkâbased metrics to characterize the spatial structure and prioritize regions for conservation. The network was constructed using yearâround movements derived from 133 archival lightâlevel geolocators attached to Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) originating from 12 breeding sites across their North American breeding range. From these breeding sites, we identified 10 autumn stopover nodes (regions) in North America, 13 nonâbreeding nodes located around the Gulf of Mexico, Mexico, Florida, and the Caribbean, and 136 unique edges (migratory routes) connecting nodes. We found strong migratory connectivity between breeding and autumn stopover sites and moderate migratory connectivity between the breeding and nonâbreeding sites. We identified three distinct âcommunitiesâ of nodes that corresponded to western, central, and eastern North American flyways. Several regions were important for maintaining network connectivity, with South Florida and Louisiana as the top ranked nonâbreeding nodes and the Midwest as the top ranked stopover node. We show that migratory songbird networks can have both a high degree of mixing between seasons yet still show regionally distinct migratory flyways. Such information will be crucial for accurately predicting factors that limit and regulate migratory songbirds throughout the annual cycle. Our study highlights how networkâbased metrics can be valuable for identifying overall network structure and prioritizing specific regions within a network for conserving a wide variety of migratory animals.This article is published as Knight, Samantha M., David W. Bradley, Robert G. Clark, Elizabeth A. Gow, Marc BĂ©lisle, Lisha L. Berzins, Tricia Blake et al. "Constructing and evaluating a continentâwide migratory songbird network across the annual cycle." Ecological Monographs (2018). doi: 10.1002/ecm.1298. Posted with permission.</p
Gow et al. tres timing data supplement
Gow et al. tres timing data supplemen