Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6GG, UK.
Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, UK.
Curr Biol. 2017 Dec 18;27(24):3871-3878.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.11.009. Epub 2017 Nov 30.
Which factors shape animals' migration movements across large geographical scales, how different migratory strategies emerge between populations, and how these may affect population dynamics are central questions in the field of animal migration [1] that only large-scale studies of migration patterns across a species' range can answer [2]. To address these questions, we track the migration of 270 Atlantic puffins Fratercula arctica, a red-listed, declining seabird, across their entire breeding range. We investigate the role of demographic, geographical, and environmental variables in driving spatial and behavioral differences on an ocean-basin scale by measuring puffins' among-colony differences in migratory routes and day-to-day behavior (estimated with individual daily activity budgets and energy expenditure). We show that competition and local winter resource availability are important drivers of migratory movements, with birds from larger colonies or with poorer local winter conditions migrating further and visiting less-productive waters; this in turn led to differences in flight activity and energy expenditure. Other behavioral differences emerge with latitude, with foraging effort and energy expenditure increasing when birds winter further north in colder waters. Importantly, these ocean-wide migration patterns can ultimately be linked with breeding performance: colony productivity is negatively associated with wintering latitude, population size, and migration distance, which demonstrates the cost of competition and migration on future breeding and the link between non-breeding and breeding periods. Our results help us to understand the drivers of animal migration and have important implications for population dynamics and the conservation of migratory species.
哪些因素塑造了动物在大地理尺度上的迁徙运动,不同种群之间如何出现不同的迁徙策略,以及这些策略如何影响种群动态,这些都是动物迁徙领域的核心问题[1],只有对物种整个分布范围内的迁徙模式进行大规模研究才能回答这些问题[2]。为了解决这些问题,我们追踪了 270 只大西洋海鹦 Fratercula arctica 的迁徙情况,大西洋海鹦是一种红色名录上的、数量正在减少的海鸟,它们在整个繁殖范围内迁徙。我们通过测量海鹦在迁徙路线和日常行为(通过个体每日活动预算和能量消耗来估算)方面的群体间差异,调查了人口统计学、地理和环境变量在驱动海洋盆地尺度上的空间和行为差异方面的作用。我们发现,竞争和当地冬季资源的可利用性是迁徙运动的重要驱动因素,来自较大群体或当地冬季条件较差的鸟类迁徙得更远,访问的低产水域更多;这反过来又导致了飞行活动和能量消耗的差异。其他行为差异随着纬度的变化而出现,当鸟类在更北、水温更低的地方过冬时,觅食努力和能量消耗会增加。重要的是,这些海洋范围内的迁徙模式最终可以与繁殖表现联系起来:群体生产力与冬季纬度、种群大小和迁徙距离呈负相关,这表明竞争和迁徙对未来繁殖的代价,以及非繁殖期和繁殖期之间的联系。我们的研究结果有助于我们了解动物迁徙的驱动因素,并对种群动态和迁徙物种的保护具有重要意义。