Evolution of chain migration in an aerial insectivorous bird, the common swift Apus apus
Spectacular long-distance migration has evolved repeatedly in animals enabling exploration of resources separated in time and space. In birds, these patterns are largely driven by seasonality, cost of migration, and asymmetries in competition leading most often to leap-frog migration, where northern...
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Zusammenfassung: | Spectacular long-distance migration has evolved repeatedly in animals
enabling exploration of resources separated in time and space. In birds,
these patterns are largely driven by seasonality, cost of migration, and
asymmetries in competition leading most often to leap-frog migration,
where northern breeding populations winter furthest to the south. Here we
show that the highly aerial common swift Apus apus, spending the
non-breeding period on the wing, instead exhibits a rarely-found chain
migration pattern, where the most southern breeding populations in Europe
migrate to wintering areas furthest to the south in Africa, while the
northern populations winter to the north. The swifts concentrated in three
major areas in sub-Saharan Africa during the non-breeding period, with
substantial overlap for nearby breeding populations. We found that the
southern breeding swifts were larger, raised more young, and arrived to
the wintering areas with higher seasonal variation in greenness
(Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, NDVI) earlier than the northern
breeding swifts. This unusual chain migration pattern in common swifts is
largely driven by differential annual timing and we suggest it evolves by
prior occupancy and dominance by size in the breeding quarters and by
prior occupancy combined with diffuse competition in the winter. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.cz8w9gj1w |