Search results for "Geolocators"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Broad-front migration leads to strong migratory connectivity in the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni)

2019

Aim: Migratory animals regularly move between often distant breeding and non‐breeding ranges. Knowledge about how these ranges are linked by movements of individuals from different populations is crucial for unravelling temporal variability in population spatial structuring and for identifying environmental drivers of population dynamics acting at different spatio‐temporal scales. We performed a large‐scale individual‐based migration tracking study of an Afro‐Palaearctic migratory raptor, to determine the patterns of migratory connectivity of European breeding populations. Location: Europe, Africa. Methods: Migration data were recorded using different devices (geolocators, satellite transmi…

0106 biological sciencesBird migrationSpatial structureGPSSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaKestrel010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesNon‐breeding distribution03 medical and health sciencesSahelEuropean commissionZoologíaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologybird migration geolocators GPS non‐breeding distribution Sahel satellite telemetry spatial structure0303 health sciencesEcologybiologySatellite telemetrySpatial structureFalco naumannibiology.organism_classificationGeographySatellite telemetryChristian ministryGeolocatorsHumanities
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Data from: First records of complete annual cycles in water rails Rallus aquaticus show evidence of itinerant breeding and a complex migration system

2020

In water rails Rallus aquaticus, northern and eastern populations are migratory while southern and western populations are sedentary. Few details are known about the annual cycle of this elusive species. We studied movements and breeding in water rails from southernmost Norway where the species occurs year-round. Colour-ringed wintering birds occurred only occasionally at the study site in summer, and vice versa. Geolocator tracks revealed that wintering birds (n = 10) migrated eastwards in spring to breed on both sides of the Baltic Sea, whereas a single breeding bird from the study site wintered in north Italy. Ambient light records of geolocator birds further indicated that all but one i…

Winteringmigration ecologywater railsincubationwetland birdsBreedingRallus aquaticusanimal movementlight-level geolocatorswetlandAvian migrationgeolocatorlight-level loggeranimal tracking
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