4.7 Article

Continent-wide tracking to determine migratory connectivity and tropical habitat associations of a declining aerial insectivore

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 279, Issue 1749, Pages 4901-4906

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2012.2207

Keywords

geolocator; songbird; South America

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. National Geographic Society
  3. Coastal Bend Audubon Society
  4. National Audubon Society
  5. North American Bluebird Society
  6. Shell Canada Environment Fund
  7. TD Friends of the Environment
  8. Canadian Wildlife Foundation
  9. Monmouth County Audubon Society
  10. United States Golf Association
  11. Purple Martin Society of Collier County
  12. Wildlife Diversity Small Grant Program of the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish Parks
  13. Purple Martin Conservation Association
  14. National Science Foundation [NSF: EAGER 0946685]
  15. Silence of the Songbirds (Stutchbury, Walker Co.)
  16. Direct For Biological Sciences
  17. Division Of Environmental Biology [0946685] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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North American birds that feed on flying insects are experiencing steep population declines, particularly long-distance migratory populations in the northern breeding range. We determine, for the first time, the level of migratory connectivity across the range of a songbird using direct tracking of individuals, and test whether declining northern populations have higher exposure to agricultural landscapes at their non-breeding grounds in South America. We used light-level geolocators to track purple martins, Progne subis, originating from North American breeding populations, coast-to-coast (n = 95 individuals). We show that breeding populations of the eastern subspecies, P. s. subis, that are separated by ca. 2000 km, nevertheless have almost completely overlapping non-breeding ranges in Brazil. Most (76%) P. s. subis overwintered in northern Brazil near the Amazon River, not in the agricultural landscape of southern Brazil. Individual non-breeding sites had an average of 91 per cent forest and only 4 per cent agricultural ground cover within a 50 km radius, and birds originating from declining northern breeding populations were not more exposed to agricultural landscapes than stable southern breeding populations. Our results show that differences in wintering location and habitat do not explain recent trends in breeding population declines in this species, and instead northern populations may be constrained in their ability to respond to climate change.

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