Department of Zoology & Physiology, University of Wyoming Museum of Vertebrates, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, United States of America.
Golden Gate Raptor Observatory, Sausalito, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 17;15(11):e0226318. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226318. eCollection 2020.
The large-scale patterns of movement for the Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus), a small forest hawk found throughout western North America, are largely unknown. However, based on field observations we set out to test the hypothesis that juvenile migratory A. striatus caught along two distinct migration routes on opposite sides of the Sierra Nevada Mountains of North America (Pacific Coast and Intermountain Migratory Flyways) come from geographically different natal populations. We applied stable isotope analysis of hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O) of feathers, and large scale models of spatial isotopic variation (isoscapes) to formulate spatially explicit predictions of the origin of the migrant birds. Novel relationships were assessed between the measured hydrogen and oxygen isotope values of feathers from A. striatus museum specimens of known origin and the isoscape modeled hydrogen and oxygen isotope values of precipitation at those known locations. We used these relationships to predict the origin regions for birds migrating along the two flyways from the measured isotope values of migrant's feathers and the associated hydrogen and oxygen isotopic composition of precipitation where these feathers were formed. The birds from the two migration routes had overlap in their natal/breeding origins and did not differentiate into fully separate migratory populations, with birds from the Pacific Coast Migratory Flyway showing broader natal geographic origins than those from the Intermountain Flyway. The methodology based on oxygen isotopes had, in general, less predictive power than the one based on hydrogen. There was broad agreement between the two isotope approaches in the geographic assignment of the origins of birds migrating along the Pacific Coast Flyway, but not for those migrating along the Intermountain Migratory Flyway. These results are discussed in terms of their implications for conservation efforts of A. striatus in western North America, and the use of combined hydrogen and oxygen stable isotope analysis to track the movement of birds of prey on continental scales.
关于分布于整个北美西部的小型林鹰——纹腹小鵟(Accipiter striatus)的大规模迁徙模式,我们知之甚少。然而,基于野外观察,我们提出了一个假设,即沿北美洲内华达山脉两侧两条不同迁徙路线(太平洋海岸迁徙和内陆迁徙飞行路线)捕捉到的幼年迁徙纹腹小鵟(Accipiter striatus)来自于地理位置不同的繁殖种群。我们应用羽毛氢(H)和氧(O)稳定同位素分析以及大尺度空间同位素变化模型(isoscapes),对候鸟的起源地进行了空间明确的预测。我们评估了已知来源的纹腹小鵟博物馆标本的羽毛测量氢和氧同位素值与模型化的已知地点降水的氢和氧同位素值之间的新关系。我们使用这些关系来预测从两条迁徙路线迁徙的鸟类的起源区域,这些鸟类的羽毛是在迁徙过程中形成的,从测量的候鸟羽毛的同位素值以及与这些羽毛形成相关的降水的氢和氧同位素组成来预测。来自两条迁徙路线的鸟类在其出生地/繁殖地方面存在重叠,并没有分化为完全独立的迁徙种群,来自太平洋海岸迁徙飞行路线的鸟类的出生地地理起源比来自内陆迁徙飞行路线的鸟类更广泛。基于氧同位素的方法总体上比基于氢的方法的预测能力要低。基于两种同位素的方法在对沿太平洋海岸迁徙飞行路线迁徙的鸟类的起源地的地理分配上有广泛的一致性,但对沿内陆迁徙飞行路线迁徙的鸟类的起源地的地理分配则没有。这些结果是根据它们对北美西部纹腹小鵟保护工作的影响以及利用结合氢和氧稳定同位素分析来追踪猛禽在大陆范围内的运动进行讨论的。