4.8 Article

Extreme altitude changes between night and day during marathon flights of great snipes

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 15, Pages 3433-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.05.047

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Centre for Animal Movement Research at Lund University, CAnMove, Linnaeus grant [34920078690]
  2. Crafoord Foundation in Lund
  3. Lunds Djurskyddsfond
  4. Olle Engkvists Stif-telse

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Several factors affect the flight altitude of migratory birds, such as topography, ambient temperature, wind conditions, air humidity, and predation avoidance. Recent tracking data showed that migratory birds, like the great snipes, change altitude around dawn and dusk during seasonal migrations, possibly for orientation by landmarks, predator avoidance, and seeking cold altitudes to counteract heating from direct sunlight.
Several factors affect the flight altitude of migratory birds, such as topography, ambient temperature, wind conditions, air humidity, predation avoidance, landmark orientation, and avoiding over-heating from direct sunlight.(1-6) Recent tracking of migratory birds over long distances has shown that migrants change flight altitude more commonly and dramatically than previously thought.(4-8) The reasons behind these altitude changes are not well understood. In their seasonal migrations between Sweden and sub-Saharan Africa, great snipes Gallinago media make non-stop flights of 4,000-7,000 km, lasting 60-90 h.(9,10) Activity and air pressure data from multisensor dataloggers showed that great snipes repeatedly changed altitudes around dawn and dusk, between average cruising heights about 2,000 m (above sea level) at night and around 4,000 m during daytime. Frequency and autocorrelation analyses corroborated a conspicuous diel cycle in flight altitude. Most birds regularly flew at 6,000 m and one bird reached 8,700 m, possibly the highest altitude ever recorded for an identified migrating bird. The diel altitude changes took place independently of climate zone, topography, and habitat overflown. Ambient temperature, wind condition, and humidity have no important diel variation at the high altitudes chosen by great snipes. Instead, improved view for orientation by landmarks, predator avoidance, and not least, seeking cold altitudes at day to counteract heating from direct sunlight are the most plausible explanations for the diel altitude cycle. Together with similar recent findings for a small songbird,(6) the great snipes' altitudinal performance sheds new light on the complexity and challenges of migratory flights.

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