4.3 Article

Integrating tracking and resight data enables unbiased inferences about migratory connectivity and winter range survival from archival tags

期刊

ORNITHOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
卷 123, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ornithapp/duab010

关键词

archival tracking tags; integrated Bayesian models; mark-resight data; migratory connectivity; Painted Bunting; Passerina ciris; survival bias

资金

  1. Neotropical Migratory Bird Protection Act grant from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service [6759]
  2. Disney Conservation Fund
  3. Spring Island Land Trust
  4. Cornell Lab of Ornithology
  5. Smithsonian Institution
  6. Utah State University

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study discusses the use of archival geolocators in studying small migratory organisms, emphasizing the importance of bias correction in data analysis. By integrating geolocator recovery data and mark-resight data, unbiased estimates of migratory connectivity and survival probabilities in different regions were obtained. Simulation and empirical data of Painted Buntings were used to validate the effectiveness of an integrated Bayesian model in estimating transition probabilities and identifying potential threats to the species.
Archival geolocators have transformed the study of small, migratory organisms but analysis of data from these devices requires bias correction because tags are only recovered from individuals that survive and are re-captured at their tagging location. We show that integrating geolocator recovery data and mark-resight data enables unbiased estimates of both migratory connectivity between breeding and nonbreeding populations and region-specific survival probabilities for wintering locations. Using simulations, we first demonstrate that an integrated Bayesian model returns unbiased estimates of transition probabilities between seasonal ranges. We also used simulations to determine how different sampling designs influence the estimability of transition probabilities. We then parameterized the model with tracking data and mark-resight data from declining Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris) populations breeding in the eastern United States, hypothesized to be threatened by the illegal pet trade in parts of their Caribbean, nonbreeding range. Consistent with this hypothesis, we found that male buntings wintering in Cuba were 20% less likely to return to the breeding grounds than birds wintering elsewhere in their range. Improving inferences from archival tags through proper data collection and further development of integrated models will advance our understanding of the full annual cycle ecology of migratory species.

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