U.S. Geological Survey, Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA.
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Emergency Center for Transboundary Animal Disease, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Mov Ecol. 2015 Feb 2;3(1):3. doi: 10.1186/s40462-015-0029-6. eCollection 2015.
Identifying movement routes and stopover sites is necessary for developing effective management and conservation strategies for migratory animals. In the case of migratory birds, a collection of migration routes, known as a flyway, is often hundreds to thousands of kilometers long and can extend across political boundaries. Flyways encompass the entire geographic range between the breeding and non-breeding areas of a population, species, or a group of species, and they provide spatial frameworks for management and conservation across international borders. Existing flyway maps are largely qualitative accounts based on band returns and survey data rather than observed movement routes. In this study, we use satellite and GPS telemetry data and dynamic Brownian bridge movement models to build upon existing maps and describe waterfowl space use probabilistically in the Central Asian and East Asian-Australasian Flyways.
Our approach provided new information on migratory routes that was not easily attainable with existing methods to describe flyways. Utilization distributions from dynamic Brownian bridge movement models identified key staging and stopover sites, migration corridors and general flyway outlines in the Central Asian and East Asian-Australasian Flyways. A map of space use from ruddy shelducks depicted two separate movement corridors within the Central Asian Flyway, likely representing two distinct populations that show relatively strong connectivity between breeding and wintering areas. Bar-headed geese marked at seven locations in the Central Asian Flyway showed heaviest use at several stopover sites in the same general region of high-elevation lakes along the eastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. Our analysis of data from multiple Anatidae species marked at sites throughout Asia highlighted major movement corridors across species and confirmed that the Central Asian and East Asian-Australasian Flyways were spatially distinct.
The dynamic Brownian bridge movement model improves our understanding of flyways by estimating relative use of regions in the flyway while providing detailed, quantitative information on migration timing and population connectivity including uncertainty between locations. This model effectively quantifies the relative importance of different migration corridors and stopover sites and may help prioritize specific areas in flyways for conservation of waterbird populations.
确定候鸟的迁徙路线和中途停留地对于制定有效的迁徙动物管理和保护策略至关重要。对于候鸟而言,迁徙路线通常由数百至数千公里长的路线组成,这些路线可能跨越政治边界。迁徙通道涵盖了一个种群、物种或一组物种的繁殖地和非繁殖地之间的整个地理范围,为跨越国际边界的管理和保护提供了空间框架。现有的迁徙通道图主要是基于带环返回和调查数据的定性描述,而不是实际的迁徙路线。在本研究中,我们使用卫星和 GPS 遥测数据以及动态布朗桥运动模型,在现有的地图基础上进行补充,并在中亚和东亚-澳大拉西亚迁徙通道中对水禽的空间使用进行概率描述。
我们的方法提供了有关迁徙路线的新信息,这些信息是使用现有的方法来描述迁徙通道所难以获得的。动态布朗桥运动模型的利用分布确定了中亚和东亚-澳大拉西亚迁徙通道中的关键中途停留地和迁徙走廊以及一般迁徙通道轮廓。赤麻鸭的空间利用图描绘了中亚迁徙通道内的两条单独的迁徙走廊,可能代表了两个不同的种群,这些种群在繁殖地和越冬地之间表现出相对较强的连通性。在中亚迁徙通道的七个地点标记的斑头雁显示,在青藏高原东部高海拔湖泊的同一地区的几个中途停留地使用最为频繁。我们对亚洲多个鸭科物种标记地点的数据进行分析,突出了物种之间的主要迁徙走廊,并证实了中亚和东亚-澳大拉西亚迁徙通道在空间上是不同的。
动态布朗桥运动模型通过估计迁徙通道中各区域的相对使用情况,同时提供有关迁徙时间和种群连通性的详细、定量信息,包括位置之间的不确定性,从而提高了我们对迁徙通道的理解。该模型有效地量化了不同迁徙走廊和中途停留地的相对重要性,并可能有助于为水鸟种群的保护确定迁徙通道中的特定优先区域。