4.5 Article

Fundamental limits to the accuracy of deuterium isotopes for identifying the spatial origin of migratory animals

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 158, Issue 2, Pages 183-192

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-008-1143-6

Keywords

Stable isotope; Migration; Deuterium; Isotope map

Categories

Funding

  1. US Geological Survey
  2. The Fullbright Foundation

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Deuterium isotope analyses have revolutionized the study of migratory connectivity because global gradients of deuterium in precipitation (delta D-P) are expressed on a continental scale. Several authors have constructed continental scale base maps of delta D-P to provide a spatial reference for studying the movement patterns of migratory species and, although they are very useful, these maps present a static, 40-year average view of the landscape that ignores much underlying inter-annual variation. To more fully understand the consequences of this underlying variation, we analyzed the GNIP deuterium data, the source for all current delta D-P maps, to estimate the minimum separation in delta D-P (and latitude) necessary to conclude with a given level of confidence that distinct delta D-P values represent different geographic sites. Extending analyses of delta D-P successfully to deuterium in tissues of living organisms, e.g., feathers in migratory birds (delta D-F), is dependent on the existence of geographic separation of delta D-P, where every geographic location has a distribution of values associated with temporal variability in delta D-P. Analyses were conducted for three distinct geographic regions: North America, eastern North America (east of longitude 100W), and Argentina. At the 80% confidence level, the minimum separation values were 12, 7, and 14 degrees of latitude (equivalent to 53, 31, and 32 degrees) for North America, eastern North America, and Argentina, respectively. Hence, in eastern North America, for example, one may not be able to accurately assign individual samples to sites separated by less than about 7 degrees of latitude as the distributions of delta D-P were not distinct at latitudes < 7 degrees apart. Moreover, two samples that differ by less than 31 degrees cannot be confidently said to originate from different latitudes. These estimates of minimum separation for delta D-P do not include other known sources of variation in feather deuterium (delta D-F) and hence are a first order approximation that may be useful, in the absence of more specific information for the system of interest, for planning and interpreting the results of new stable isotope studies.

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