Breeding latitude drives individual schedules in a trans-hemispheric migrant bird

Despite clear benefits of optimal arrival time on breeding grounds, migration schedules may vary with an individual bird's innate quality, non-breeding habitat or breeding destination. Here, we show that for the bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica baueri), a shorebird that makes the longest known non-stop migratory flights of any bird, timing of migration for individual birds from a non-breeding site in New Zealand was strongly correlated with their specific breeding latitudes in Alaska, USA, a 16,000-18,000 km journey away. Furthermore, this variation carried over even to the southbound return migration, 6 months later, with birds returning to New Zealand in approximately the same order in which they departed. These tightly scheduled movements on a global scale suggest endogenously controlled routines, with breeding site as the primary driver of temporal variation throughout the annual cycle.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Conklin, Jesse R., Battley, Phil F., Potter, Murray A., Fox, James W.

Date:
1 January, 2010
Journal/Source:
Nature Communications / 1
Page(s):
1-6
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1072