4.2 Article

Migration phenology and patterns of American woodcock in central North America derived using satellite telemetry

Journal

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
Volume 2021, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.2981/wlb.00816

Keywords

American woodcock; migration phenology; satellite telemetry; Scolopax minor

Funding

  1. United States Fish and Wildlife Service Webless Migratory Game Bird Program
  2. Arkansas Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit (United States Geological Survey) [G15AC00258]
  3. Minnesota Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
  4. Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
  5. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
  6. Hal and Jean Glassen Memorial Foundation
  7. Ruffed Grouse Society and American Woodcock Society
  8. University of Arkansas
  9. University of Minnesota
  10. Woodcock Limited

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The research found that woodcock migration in the Central Management Region of North America is more synchronous in spring than in autumn, with autumn migration being shorter in duration. Analysis of migration data showed that migration end date and net migration displacement were negatively related to initiation date and rate of migration, while spring migration duration, end date, number of stopovers and net migration displacement were negatively related to migration rate.
American woodcock Scolopax minor (hereafter woodcock) migration ecology is poorly understood, but has implications for population ecology and management, especially related to harvest. To describe woodcock migration patterns and phenology, we captured and equipped 73 woodcock with satellite tracking devices in the Central Management Region (analogous to the Mississippi Flyway) of North America and documented migration paths of 60 individual woodcock and 87 autumn or spring woodcock migrations during 2014-2016. Woodcock migration at the scale of the Central Management Region was more synchronous in spring than in autumn, but unlike most other migratory birds, average duration of autumn migration (31 days) was shorter than duration of spring migration (53 days). This difference in migration duration resulted from woodcock making more close-together migratory stopovers during spring migration, not because woodcock had individual stopovers of longer duration. During autumn migration, the number of days, the number of stopovers, migration end date and net migration displacement were negatively related to initiation date and rate of migration, and the number of stopovers and the net migration displacement were negatively related with migration end date. Spring migration duration, end date, the number of stopovers and net migration displacement were negatively related to migration rate and initiation date was positively related to migration rate, suggesting that woodcock that initiated spring migration later had faster migration rates. Juvenile female woodcock began spring migration later than adult female woodcock. Our results provide a basis for comparing current harvest seasons with presence of migrating woodcock during autumn and provide insight into differential harvest of migratory versus local woodcock on breeding areas.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available