Radiotracking refines the role of food supplementation on overwinter survival of the Dark-eyed Junco (Junco hyemalis)

IF 0.5 4区 农林科学 Q4 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE Avian Biology Research Pub Date : 2020-09-02 DOI:10.1177/1758155920951763
Andrew J. Spellmeyer, C. Rogers, Mark A Schneegurt
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Abstract

Resource availability, particularly food, can limit the size of bird populations during the nonbreeding season. Resident and short-distance migrant birds, wintering in colder environments, should show strong effects of food limitation on winter survival. Here, we introduce a novel experiment testing for the effect of supplemental feeding on the winter survival of the Dark-eyed Junco (Junco hyemalis), a short- to medium-distance migrant in North America. Color-ringed juncos were monitored by resighting in the winters of 2011, 2012, and 2013. Winter supplemental feeding significantly increased junco survival within winters. However, it is possible that juncos not resighted underwent within-winter dispersal rather than died. Thus, in the winter of 2014, very high frequency radio transmitters were attached to 29 juncos from unsupplemented sites to ascertain the fate of birds not resighted. We found that movement beyond the study area was minimal and most juncos maintained a discrete home range. Of the radiotagged birds, 27.5% were not resighted during observation periods, but were located and confirmed alive via radiotracking. A correction factor for within-winter dispersal was applied to previous years’ data and the effect of food supplementation remained statistically significant for two of the three winters; the trend was the same, but not statistically significant during the warmest winter. The present results contribute to a developing conceptual model of migration-specific effects of winter food limitation. Dark-eyed Juncos are an iconic backyard birdfeeder species that have shown a steady population decline for decades. Supplemental feeding during the wintering period may regularly elevate population recruitment by increasing winter survival in avian species that winter in thermally challenging environments.
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辐射追踪研究了补充食物对黑眼Junco(Junco-hyemalis)越冬生存的作用
在非繁殖季节,资源的可用性,特别是食物,可以限制鸟类种群的规模。在较冷的环境中过冬的候鸟和短距离候鸟应表现出强烈的食物限制对冬季生存的影响。本文介绍了一种新的实验方法,测试了补充摄食对北美中短途候鸟黑眼Junco (Junco hyemalis)冬季生存的影响。在2011年、2012年和2013年的冬天,通过重新观察来监测彩环juncos。冬季补充饲料显著提高了junco在冬季的成活率。然而,没有被重新安置的juncos可能在冬季内进行了分散而不是死亡。因此,在2014年冬季,在未被补充的地点的29个juncos上安装了高频无线电发射器,以确定未被重新安置的鸟类的命运。我们发现,在研究区域之外的活动是最小的,大多数juncos保持一个离散的家园范围。在有无线电标记的鸟类中,27.5%在观察期间没有被发现,但通过无线电跟踪被定位并确认活着。对前几年的数据应用了冬季内分散的校正因子,三个冬季中的两个冬季食物补充的影响仍然具有统计学意义;这一趋势是相同的,但在最温暖的冬天没有统计学意义。目前的研究结果有助于建立冬季食物限制对迁徙特异性影响的概念模型。黑眼睛的Juncos是一种标志性的后院喂鸟物种,几十年来其数量一直在稳步下降。在冬季期间,通过增加鸟类在高温环境中过冬的存活率,可以定期增加种群的补充。
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来源期刊
Avian Biology Research
Avian Biology Research 农林科学-奶制品与动物科学
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Avian Biology Research provides a forum for the publication of research in every field of ornithology. It covers all aspects of pure and applied ornithology for wild or captive species as well as research that does not readily fit within the publication objectives of other ornithological journals. By considering a wide range of research fields for publication, Avian Biology Research provides a forum for people working in every field of ornithology.
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