Farmer A, Rye R, Landis G, Bern C, Kester C, Ridley I
U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, 2150 Centre Avenue, Building C, Fort Collins, CO 80526, USA.
Isotopes Environ Health Stud. 2003 Sep;39(3):169-77. doi: 10.1080/1025601031000108660.
We evaluated the potential use of stable isotopes to establish linkages between the wintering grounds and the breeding grounds of the Pectoral Sandpiper (Calidris melanotos), the White-rumped Sandpiper (Calidris fuscicollis), the Baird's Sandpiper (Calidris bairdii), and other Neotropical migratory shorebird species (e.g., Tringa spp.). These species molt their flight feathers on the wintering grounds and hence their flight feathers carry chemical signatures that are characteristic of their winter habitat. The objective of our pilot study was to assess the feasibility of identifying the winter origin of individual birds by: (1) collecting shorebird flight feathers from several widely separated Argentine sites and analyzing these for a suite of stable isotopes; and 2) analyzing the deuterium and 18O isotope data that were available from precipitation measurement stations in Argentina. Isotopic ratios (delta13C, delta15N and delta34S) of flight feathers were significantly different among three widely separated sites in Argentina during January 2001. In terms of relative importance in separating the sites, delta34S was most important, followed by delta15N, and then delta13C. In the complete discriminant analysis, the classification function correctly predicted group membership in 85% of the cases (jackknifed classification matrix). In a stepwise analysis delta13C was dropped from the solution, and site membership was correctly predicted in 92% of cases (jackknifed matrix). Analysis of precipitation data showed that both deltaD and delta18O were significantly related to both latitude and longitude on a countrywide scale (p < 0.001). Other variables, month, altitude, explained little additional variation in these isotope ratios. Several issues were identified that will likely constrain the degree of accuracy one can expect in predicting the geographic origin of birds from Argentina. There was unexplained variation in isotope ratios within and among the different wing feathers from individual birds. Such variation may indicate that birds are not faithful to a local site during their winter stay in Argentina. There was significant interannual variation in the deltaD and delta18O of precipitation. Hence, specific locations may not have a constant signature for some isotopes. Moreover, the fractionation that occurs in wetlands due to evaporation significantly skews local deltaD and delta18O values, which may undermine the strong large-scale gradients seen in the precipitation data. We are continuing the research with universities in Argentina with a focus on expanding the breadth of feather collection and attempting to resolve the identified issues.
我们评估了利用稳定同位素来建立胸斑滨鹬(Calidris melanotos)、白腰滨鹬(Calidris fuscicollis)、贝氏滨鹬(Calidris bairdii)以及其他新热带区迁徙滨鸟物种(如矶鹬属(Tringa spp.))越冬地与繁殖地之间联系的可能性。这些物种在越冬地换羽,因此其飞羽带有其冬季栖息地特有的化学特征。我们初步研究的目的是通过以下方式评估识别个体鸟类冬季来源的可行性:(1)从阿根廷几个相距甚远的地点收集滨鸟飞羽,并对其进行一系列稳定同位素分析;(2)分析阿根廷降水测量站提供的氘和氧-18同位素数据。2001年1月,阿根廷三个相距甚远的地点的飞羽同位素比率(δ13C、δ15N和δ34S)存在显著差异。就区分这些地点的相对重要性而言,δ34S最为重要,其次是δ15N,然后是δ13C。在完整判别分析中,分类函数在85%的情况下正确预测了类别归属(留一法分类矩阵)。在逐步分析中,δ13C从解中剔除,92%的情况下正确预测了地点归属(留一法矩阵)。降水数据分析表明,在全国范围内,δD和δ18O均与纬度和经度显著相关(p < 0.001)。其他变量,如月份、海拔,对这些同位素比率的额外变化解释甚少。我们确定了几个可能会限制预测阿根廷鸟类地理来源时所能期望的准确程度的问题。个体鸟类不同翼羽内部和之间的同位素比率存在无法解释的变化。这种变化可能表明鸟类在阿根廷越冬期间并不固定在某个局部地点。降水的δD和δ18O存在显著的年际变化。因此,某些同位素的特定地点可能没有恒定的特征。此外,湿地因蒸发而发生的分馏会显著扭曲当地的δD和δ18O值,这可能会削弱降水数据中明显的大规模梯度。我们正在与阿根廷的大学继续开展这项研究,重点是扩大羽毛收集的范围,并试图解决已确定的问题。