Search results for "Calidris alba"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Effects of food abundance and early clutch predation on reproductive timing in a high Arctic shorebird exposed to advancements in arthropod abundance.

2016

12 pages; International audience; Climate change may influence the phenology of organisms unequally across trophic levels and thus lead to phenological mismatches between predators and prey. In cases where prey availability peaks before reproducing predators reach maximal prey demand, any negative fitness consequences would selectively favor resynchronization by earlier starts of the reproductive activities of the predators. At a study site in northeast Greenland, over a period of 17 years, the median emergence of the invertebrate prey of Sanderling Calidris alba advanced with 1.27 days per year. Yet, over the same period Sanderling did not advance hatching date. Thus, Sanderlings increasin…

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientBird migrationchick growthPOPULATION-SIZEBird migrationNEST PREDATIONBREEDING PHENOLOGYBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesphenology010605 ornithologyPredation[ SDV.EE ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmentnest survivalfoodCalidris alba (Pallastrophic mismatchAbundance (ecology)INTERANNUAL VARIATIONCHANGING CLIMATEtimingNORTHEAST GREENLANDEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationTrophic levelOriginal ResearchCalidris albatrophic interactions[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmentCalidris alba (Pallas 1764) [sanderling][ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyCLIMATE-CHANGEEcologyPhenologyEcologyHatchingSNOW-COVER1764) [sanderling]trophic mismatch.PHENOLOGICAL MISMATCHESCalidrisclimate changeMIGRATORY BIRDSCalidris alba [sanderling][SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyArctic ecology
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Discriminating uniparental and biparental breeding strategies by monitoring nest temperature

2017

10 pages; International audience; Birds exhibit a wide diversity of breeding strategies. During incubation or chick-rearing, parental care can be either uniparental, by either the male or the female, or biparental. Understanding the selective pressures that drive these different strategies represents an exciting challenge for ecologists. In this context, assigning the type of parental care at the nest (e.g. biparental or uniparental incubation strategy) is often a prerequisite to answering questions in evolutionary ecology. The aim of this study was to produce a standardized method unequivocally to assign an incubation strategy to any Sanderling Calidris alba nest found in the field by moni…

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientnest temperatureparental careZoologynest attendanceshorebirdsContext (language use)Biology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences010605 ornithologyPredationfooddiscriminant functionNestarctic[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisIncubationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCalidris alba[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologythermologgerEcologyincubation strategyincubation behaviourincubationSanderlingCalidrisincubation systemAnimal Science and ZoologyEvolutionary ecology[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyPaternal care[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisIbis
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Data from: Exposing the structure of an Arctic food web

2016

How food webs are structured has major implications for their stability and dynamics. While poorly studied to date, arctic food webs are commonly assumed to be simple in structure, with few links per species. If this is the case, then different parts of the web may be weakly connected to each other, with populations and species united by only a low number of links. We provide the first highly resolved description of trophic link structure for a large part of a high-arctic food web. For this purpose, we apply a combination of recent techniques to describing the links between three predator guilds (insectivorous birds, spiders, and lepidopteran parasitoids) and their two dominant prey orders …

HolocenePlectrophenax nivalisLife SciencesXysticus deichmannispecialismErigone arcticaIchneumonidaeEmblyna borealismedicine and health careBraconidaegeneralismTachinidaePardosa glacialismolecular diet analysisMedicineXysticus labradorensisEulophidaeCalidris alpinaCalidris alba
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Data from: Effects of food abundance and early clutch predation on reproductive timing in a high Arctic shorebird exposed to advancements in arthropo…

2017

Climate change may influence the phenology of organisms unequally across trophic levels and thus lead to phenological mismatches between predators and prey. In cases where prey availability peaks before reproducing predators reach maximal prey demand, any negative fitness consequences would selectively favor resynchronization by earlier starts of the reproductive activities of the predators. At a study site in northeast Greenland, over a period of 17 years, the median emergence of the invertebrate prey of Sanderling Calidris alba advanced with 1.27 days per year. Yet, over the same period Sanderling did not advance hatching date. Thus, Sanderlings increasingly hatched after their prey was m…

chick growthHoloceneDipteraSanderlingLife sciencesmedicine and health careHemipteranest survivalVulpes lagopustrophic mismatchAraneatimingMedicineclutch predationbird migrationmismatchCalidris alba
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Data from: Low fitness at low latitudes: wintering in the tropics increases migratory delays and mortality rates in an Arctic breeding shorebird

2020

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 …

solar geolocationtimingsite fidelitynutrient storage strategiesCalidris alba
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