4.5 Article

Hatching date influences winter habitat occupancy: Examining seasonal interactions across the full annual cycle in a migratory songbird

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 14, Pages 9241-9253

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7500

Keywords

carry-over effects; life-history trade-off; parental effects; reproductive cost; stable isotopes

Funding

  1. U.S. Forest Service
  2. Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute
  3. Cooper Ornithological Society
  4. American Wildlife Conservation Foundation
  5. University of Massachusetts Amherst
  6. Wilson Ornithological Society
  7. American Ornithological Society

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Research shows that the hatching date of birds can affect their lifetime winter habitat occupancy, while reproductive success of adult males does not impact winter habitat occupancy. This finding contributes to our understanding of seasonal interactions in migratory birds.
Birds experience a sequence of critical events during their life cycle, and past events can subsequently determine future performance via carry-over effects. Events during the non-breeding season may influence breeding season phenology or productivity. Less is understood about how events during the breeding season affect individuals subsequently in their life cycle. Using stable carbon isotopes, we examined carry-over effects throughout the annual cycle of prairie warblers (Setophaga discolor), a declining Nearctic-Neotropical migratory passerine bird. In drier winters, juvenile males that hatched earlier at our study site in Massachusetts, USA, occupied wetter, better-quality winter habitat in the Caribbean, as indicated by depleted carbon isotope signatures. For juveniles that were sampled again as adults, repeatability in isotope signatures indicated similar winter habitat occupancy across years. Thus, hatching date of juvenile males appears to influence lifetime winter habitat occupancy. For adult males, reproductive success did not carry over to influence winter habitat occupancy. We did not find temporally consecutive domino effects across the annual cycle (breeding to wintering to breeding) or interseasonal, intergenerational effects. Our finding that a male's hatching date can have a lasting effect on winter habitat occupancy represents an important contribution to our understanding of seasonal interactions in migratory birds.

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