Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Environment Canada, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
PLoS One. 2014 Apr 16;9(4):e94437. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0094437. eCollection 2014.
Adult birds tend to show high fidelity to their breeding territory or disperse over relatively short distances. Gene flow among avian populations is thus expected to occur primarily through natal dispersal. Although natal dispersal is a critical demographic process reflecting the area over which population dynamics take place, low recapture rates of birds breeding for the first time have limited our ability to reliably estimate dispersal rates and distances. Stable isotope approaches can elucidate origins of unmarked birds and so we generated year- and age-specific δ2H and δ34S feather isoscapes (ca. 180 000 km2) of coastal-breeding Ovenbirds (Seiurus aurocapilla) and used bivariate probability density functions to assign the likely natal areas of 35 males recruited as first-year breeders into a population located in northwestern New Brunswick, Canada. Most individuals (80-94% depending on the magnitude of an age correction factor used; i.e. 28-33 out of 35) were classified as residents (i.e. fledged within our study area) and estimated minimum dispersal distances of immigrants were between 40 and 240 km. Even when considering maximum dispersal distances, the likely origin of most first-year breeders was<200 km from our study area. Our method identified recruitment into our population from large geographic areas with relatively few samples whereas previous mark-recapture based methods have required orders of magnitude more individuals to describe dispersal at such geographic scales. Natal dispersal movements revealed here suggest the spatial scale over which many population processes are taking place and we suggest that conservation plans aiming to maintain populations of Ovenbirds and ecologically-similar species should consider management units within 100 or at most 200 km of target breeding populations.
成年鸟类往往对其繁殖领地表现出高度的忠诚度,或仅在相对较短的距离内扩散。因此,鸟类种群之间的基因流动主要通过出生地扩散来实现。尽管出生地扩散是反映种群动态发生区域的关键人口过程,但首次繁殖的鸟类的低再捕获率限制了我们可靠估计扩散率和距离的能力。稳定同位素方法可以阐明未标记鸟类的起源,因此我们生成了沿海繁殖的拟鹂(Seiurus aurocapilla)的年度和年龄特异性的 δ2H 和 δ34S 羽毛同位素图谱(约 180000km2),并使用双变量概率密度函数将 35 只作为第一年繁殖者招募到位于加拿大新不伦瑞克省西北部的一个种群中的雄性的可能出生地进行了分配。大多数个体(取决于使用的年龄校正因子的大小,即 80-94%;即 35 只中有 28-33 只)被归类为居民(即在我们的研究区域内孵化),移民的估计最小扩散距离在 40 到 240 公里之间。即使考虑到最大扩散距离,大多数第一年繁殖者的可能起源地也距我们的研究区域<200 公里。我们的方法从相对较少的样本中确定了从较大地理区域招募到我们种群中的个体,而之前基于标记-重捕的方法需要数量级更多的个体来描述这种地理尺度上的扩散。这里揭示的出生地扩散运动表明了许多种群过程正在发生的空间尺度,我们建议旨在维持拟鹂和生态相似物种种群的保护计划应考虑在目标繁殖种群 100 公里或最多 200 公里内的管理单元。