Data from: A characterization of autumn nocturnal migration detected by weather surveillance radars in the northeastern US
Billions of birds migrate at night over North America each year. However, few studies have described the phenology of these movements, such as magnitudes, directions, and speeds, for more than one migration season and at regional scales. In this study, we characterize density, direction, and speed o...
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Zusammenfassung: | Billions of birds migrate at night over North America each year. However,
few studies have described the phenology of these movements, such as
magnitudes, directions, and speeds, for more than one migration season and
at regional scales. In this study, we characterize density, direction, and
speed of nocturnally migrating birds using data from 13 weather
surveillance radars in the autumns of 2010 and 2011 in the northeastern
US. After screening radar data to remove precipitation, we applied a
recently developed algorithm for characterizing velocity profiles with
previously developed methods to document bird migration. Many hourly radar
scans contained wind-borne "contamination," and these scans also
exhibited generally low overall reflectivities. Hourly scans dominated by
birds showed nightly and seasonal patterns that differed markedly from
those of low reflectivity scans. Bird migration occurred during many
nights, but a smaller number of nights with large movements of birds
defined regional nocturnal migration. Densities varied by date, time, and
location but peaked in the second and third deciles of night during the
autumn period when the most birds were migrating. Migration track (the
direction to which birds moved) shifted within nights from south
southwesterly to southwesterly during the seasonal migration peaks; this
shift was not consistent with a similar shift in wind direction. Migration
speeds varied within nights, although not closely with wind speed.
Airspeeds increased during the night; groundspeeds were highest between
the second and third deciles of night, when the greatest density of birds
was migrating. Airspeeds and groundspeeds increased during the fall
season, although groundspeeds fluctuated considerably with prevailing
winds. Significant positive correlations characterized relationships among
bird densities at southern coastal radar stations and northern inland
radar stations. The quantitative descriptions of broad-scale nocturnal
migration patterns presented here will be essential for biological and
conservation applications. These descriptions help to define migration
phenology in time and space, fill knowledge gaps in avian annual cycles,
and are useful for monitoring long-term population trends of migrants.
Furthermore, these descriptions will aid in assessing potential risks to
migrants, particularly from structures with which birds collide and
artificial lighting that disorients migrants. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.17209 |