Chabot Amy A, Hobson Keith A, Van Wilgenburg Steven L, Pérez Guillermo E, Lougheed Stephen C
Department of Biology Queen's University Kingston Ontario.
Environment and Climate Change Canada Saskatoon Saskatchewan.
Ecol Evol. 2018 Oct 24;8(22):10662-10672. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4415. eCollection 2018 Nov.
We combine genetic and stable isotope data to quantify migration patterns in Loggerhead Shrike (), a species of conservation concern in North America, to assess how connectivity differs and impacts population evolution, ecology, and conservation.
We sampled shrikes across the majority of their nonbreeding range, from the Atlantic Coast to the western United States east of the Rocky Mountains and throughout Mexico.
Our study used a Bayesian framework using δH from a breeding season origin feather and nuclear genetic microsatellite markers to distinguish between co-occurring migratory and nonmigratory individuals on the wintering grounds and, for migrants, to assign individuals to a breeding ground origin and genetic group.
Migratory shrikes were present throughout the nonbreeding range but the proportion differed among sample areas. Four main wintering areas were identified. Connectivity ranged from weakly negative in birds wintering on the Atlantic Coast to strongly positive between wintering grounds in the southwestern United States and Mexico and northwestern breeding populations. Connectivity was weakest in , and strongest in and . Although believed to be nonmigratory, long-distance movements of individuals were observed in and . Our data support a pattern of chain migration, again most notable in the western half of the species nonbreeding range, and differential migration based on age.
Our study provides of one such of the first quantitative measures of migratory connectivity and is among the first studies of a short-distance migratory passerine in North America. The higher migratory connectivity among western, versus eastern populations, and less severe population declines attributable to habitat loss or reproductive success, may result in more localized and/or less severe limiting factors for western populations and more severe on the Atlantic coast and Mississippi Alluvial Valley wintering grounds.
我们结合遗传和稳定同位素数据,以量化北美受保护物种赤肩鵙的迁徙模式,评估连通性如何不同并影响种群进化、生态和保护。
我们在赤肩鵙的大部分非繁殖范围内进行采样,范围从大西洋海岸到落基山脉以东的美国西部以及整个墨西哥。
我们的研究使用了贝叶斯框架,利用繁殖季节出生地羽毛中的δH和核基因微卫星标记,在越冬地区分同时出现的迁徙和非迁徙个体,并对迁徙个体确定其繁殖地来源和基因群体。
迁徙的赤肩鵙遍布整个非繁殖范围,但不同采样区域的比例有所不同。确定了四个主要越冬区域。连通性范围从在大西洋海岸越冬的鸟类中的弱负相关,到美国西南部与墨西哥越冬地和西北部繁殖种群之间的强正相关。连通性在[具体区域1]最弱,在[具体区域2]和[具体区域3]最强。尽管通常认为是非迁徙性的,但在[具体区域4]和[具体区域5]观察到了个体的长距离移动。我们的数据支持链式迁徙模式,这在该物种非繁殖范围的西半部最为明显,以及基于年龄的差异迁徙。
我们的研究提供了一种这样的首次对迁徙连通性的定量测量,并且是北美对短距离迁徙雀形目鸟类的首批研究之一。西部种群与东部种群相比,具有更高的迁徙连通性,且因栖息地丧失或繁殖成功率导致的种群数量下降不太严重,这可能导致西部种群的限制因素更具局部性和/或不太严重,而在大西洋海岸和密西西比河冲积平原越冬地则更为严重。