4.2 Article

Extreme climatic variability during migration invokes physiological and dietary plasticity among spring migrating ducks

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 4, Pages 340-351

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING, NRC RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/cjz-2018-0075

Keywords

Spatula discors; Aythya affinis; Blue-winged Teal; diets; environmental stochasticity; Lesser Scaup; lipid metabolites; nutrient reserves; South Dakota; spring migration

Categories

Funding

  1. South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks [7548]
  2. Department of Natural Resource Management at South Dakota State University
  3. US Geological Survey through the Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center [103]
  4. US Geological Survey through the South Dakota Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit [103]
  5. Edward D. and Sally M. Futch Graduate Fellowship from Ducks Unlimited Canada
  6. Ducks Unlimited, Inc.
  7. North Central Chapter of the Society of Wetland Scientists
  8. Dave Ankney and Sandi Johnson Waterfowl and Wetlands Graduate Research Scholarship
  9. Kenneth F. Higgins Waterfowl Research Endowment at South Dakota State University

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Environmental stochasticity encountered during migration can have negative consequences for individuals and population demographics through direct reductions in survival or cross-seasonal impacts. We took advantage of substantial interannual variation in spring migration conditions over a 4 year field study to examine physiological and dietary variation among two species of migrant ducks. We collected female Lesser Scaup (Aythya affinis (Eyton, 1838)) and Blue-winged Teal (Spatula discors (Linnaeus, 1766)) during spring migration and measured lipid and protein reserves, an index of recent lipid metabolism based on concentrations of lipid metabolites in plasma, and diets. We documented systematic interannual variation among these metrics in both species, contrasting primarily the warmest, earliest spring and the coldest, latest spring. Lesser Scaup had reduced lipid and protein reserves and consumed less energy-rich prey during the coldest and latest spring but showed no interannual variation in the index of lipid metabolism. Blue-winged Teal similarly had reduced protein reserves in the cold, late spring but maintained constant lipid reserves among years, likely facilitated by increased consumption of energy-rich seeds reflected in diets and lipid metabolism. Our results reveal impacts of environmental stochasticity on migrants and suggest that recruitment may be impacted by variable conditions encountered during migration during extreme weather events.

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