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Published September 11, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Regional wind patterns likely shape a seasonal migration detour

  • 1. University of St Andrews

Description

Migrating animals should optimise time and energy use when migrating, travelling directly to their destination. Detours from the most direct route may arise however because of barriers and weather conditions. Identifying how such situations arise from variable weather conditions is crucial to understand population response in the light of increased anthropogenic climate change. Here we used light-level geolocators to follow Cyprus wheatears for their full annual cycle in two separate years migrating between Cyprus, over the Mediterranean and the Sahara to winter in north-east sub-Saharan Africa. We predicted that any route detours would be related to wind conditions experienced during migration. We found that spring migration for all birds included an eastern detour, whilst autumn migrations were direct across the Sahara. The direct autumn migration was likely a consequence of consistent tail-winds, whilst the eastern detour in spring is likely to be more efficient given the wind conditions which are against a direct route. Such variable migration routes shaped by coincidence with prevailing winds are probably common suggesting that some birds may be able to adapt to future changes in wind conditions.

Notes

geolocator_location_data

Time stamps from the geolocator light data defined by the threshold method and associated latitude and longitude estimates for each bird.

Files

geolocator_location_data.csv

Files (610.8 kB)

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Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/jav.02466 (DOI)