Movement Ecology Laboratory, Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, Alexander Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Vogelschutzwarte Storchenhof Loburg e.V., Chausseestrasse 18, 39279 Loburg, Germany.
Proc Biol Sci. 2021 Jan 13;288(1942):20202670. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2670.
Early-life conditions have critical, long-lasting effects on the fate of individuals, yet early-life activity has rarely been linked to subsequent survival of animals in the wild. Using high-resolution GPS and body-acceleration data of 93 juvenile white storks (), we examined the links between behaviour during both pre-fledging and post-fledging (fledging-to-migration) periods and subsequent first-year survival. Juvenile daily activity (based on overall dynamic body acceleration) showed repeatable between-individual variation, the juveniles' pre- and post-fledging activity levels were correlated and both were positively associated with subsequent survival. Daily activity increased gradually throughout the post-fledging period, and the relationship between post-fledging activity and survival was stronger in individuals who increased their daily activity level faster (an interaction effect). We suggest that high activity profiles signified individuals with increased pre-migratory experience, higher individual quality and perhaps more proactive personality, which could underlie their superior survival rates. The duration of individuals' fledging-to-migration periods had a hump-shaped relationship with survival: higher survival was associated with intermediate rather than short or long durations. Short durations reflect lower pre-migratory experience, whereas very long ones were associated with slower increases in daily activity level which possibly reflects slow behavioural development. In accordance with previous studies, heavier nestlings and those that hatched and migrated earlier had increased survival. Using extensive tracking data, our study exposed new links between early-life attributes and survival, suggesting that early activity profiles in migrating birds can explain variation in first-year survival.
早期生活条件对个体的命运有着至关重要且持久的影响,但早期的活动很少与野生动物随后的生存联系起来。利用 93 只幼年白鹳()的高分辨率 GPS 和身体加速度数据,我们研究了在离巢前和离巢后(离巢到迁徙)期间的行为与随后第一年的生存之间的联系。幼鸟的日常活动(基于整体动态身体加速度)表现出个体间可重复的差异,幼鸟的离巢前和离巢后的活动水平相关,并且都与随后的生存呈正相关。在离巢后的整个期间,每日活动逐渐增加,而离巢后的活动与生存之间的关系在那些更快增加每日活动水平的个体中更强(交互效应)。我们认为,高活动水平代表了具有更多预迁徙经验、更高个体质量和更积极个性的个体,这可能是它们更高生存率的基础。个体的离巢到迁徙期间的持续时间与生存呈驼峰形关系:较高的存活率与中等持续时间相关,而不是短或长持续时间。较短的持续时间反映了较低的预迁徙经验,而非常长的持续时间与每日活动水平的缓慢增加有关,这可能反映了行为发展缓慢。与之前的研究一致,较重的巢雏、孵化和迁徙较早的巢雏的存活率更高。利用广泛的跟踪数据,我们的研究揭示了早期生活属性与生存之间的新联系,表明迁徙鸟类的早期活动模式可以解释第一年的生存变化。