Social behavior among nocturnally migrating birds revealed by automated moonwatching

Eli S Bridge, Wesley T Honeycutt, Angela J Chen, Riley Miller, Jeffrey F Kelly
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Abstract

Migrating birds often fly in group formations during the daytime, whereas at night, it is generally presumed that they fly singly. However, it is difficult to quantify group behavior during nocturnal migration as there are few means of directly observing interactions among individuals. We employed an automated form of moonwatching to estimate percentages of birds that appear to migrate in groups during the night within the Central Flyway of North America. We compared percentages of birds in groups across the spring and fall and examined overnight temporal patterns of group behavior. We found groups were rare in both seasons, never exceeding 10% of birds observed, and were almost nonexistent during the fall. We also observed an overnight pattern of group behavior in the spring wherein groups were more commonly detected early in the night and again just before migration activity ceased. This finding may be related to changes in species composition of migrants throughout the night, or alternatively, it suggests that group formation may be associated with flocking activity on the ground as groups are most prevalent when birds begin and end a night of migration.
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自动观月系统揭示的夜间迁徙鸟类的社交行为
迁徙鸟类在白天通常结队飞行,而在夜间,一般认为它们是单飞的。然而,由于直接观察个体间互动的手段很少,因此很难量化夜间迁徙时的群体行为。我们采用了一种自动观月方式来估算北美中部航道上夜间成群迁徙的鸟类比例。我们比较了春秋两季群居鸟类的百分比,并研究了群居行为的夜间时间模式。我们发现,在这两个季节中,成群结队的鸟类都很少见,从未超过所观察到鸟类的 10%,而在秋季几乎不存在成群结队的鸟类。我们还观察到春季群体行为的夜间模式,即在夜间早些时候和迁徙活动停止前,更常发现群体。这一发现可能与迁徙鸟类在整个夜间的物种组成变化有关,或者也表明群体的形成可能与地面上的鸟群活动有关,因为群体在鸟类开始和结束夜间迁徙时最为普遍。
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