Data from: Low fitness at low latitudes: wintering in the tropics increases migratory delays and mortality rates in an Arctic breeding shorebird
1. Evolutionary theories of seasonal migration generally assume that the costs of longer migrations are balanced by benefits at the non-breeding destinations. 2. We tested, and rejected, the null hypothesis of equal survival and timing of spring migration for High Arctic breeding sanderling Calidris...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Evolutionary theories of seasonal migration generally assume that the
costs of longer migrations are balanced by benefits at the non-breeding
destinations. 2. We tested, and rejected, the null hypothesis of equal
survival and timing of spring migration for High Arctic breeding
sanderling Calidris alba using six and eight winter destinations between
55° N and 25° S, respectively. 3. Annual apparent survival was
considerably lower for adult birds wintering in tropical West-Africa
(Mauritania: 0.74 and Ghana: 0.75) than in three European sites (0.84,
0.84 and 0.87) and in subtropical Namibia (0.85). Moreover, compared with
adults, second calendar-year sanderlings in the tropics, but not in
Europe, often refrained from migrating north during the first possible
breeding season. During northward migration, tropical-wintering
sanderlings occurred at their final staging site in Iceland 5-15 days
later than birds wintering further north or south. Namibia-wintering
sanderlings tracked with solar geolocators only staged in West-Africa
during southward migration. 4. The low annual survival, the later age of
first northward migration and the later passage through Iceland during
northward migration of tropical-wintering sanderlings, in addition to the
skipping of this area during northward but not southward migration by
Namibia-wintering sanderlings, all suggest they face issues during the
late non-breeding season in West-Africa. 5. Migrating sanderlings defy
long distances but may end up in winter areas with poor fitness prospects.
We suggest that ecological conditions in tropical West-Africa make the
fuelling prior to northward departure problematic. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.m73n280 |