Souc Charly, Sadoul Nicolas, Blanchon Thomas, Vittecoq Marion, Pin Christophe, Vidal Eric, Mante Alain, Choquet Rémi, McCoy Karen D
MIVEGEC, University of Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, Montpellier, France.
CEFE, University of Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD, University of Paul Valery Montpellier 3, Montpellier, France.
Mov Ecol. 2023 Feb 11;11(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s40462-023-00375-4.
As for other life history traits, variation occurs in movement patterns with important impacts on population demography and community interactions. Individuals can show variation in the extent of seasonal movement (or migration) or can change migratory routes among years. Internal factors, such as age or body condition, may strongly influence changes in movement patterns. Indeed, young individuals often tend to move across larger spatial scales compared to adults, but relatively few studies have investigated the proximate and ultimate factors driving such variation. This is particularly the case for seabirds in which the sub-adult period is long and difficult to follow. Here, we examine migration variation and the factors that affect it in a common Mediterranean seabird, the Yellow-legged gull (Larus michahellis).
The data include the encounter histories of 5158 birds marked as fledglings between 1999 and 2004 at 14 different colonies in southern France and resighted over 10 years. Using a multi-event mark-recapture modeling framework, we use these data to estimate the probability of movement and survival, taking into account recapture heterogeneity and age.
In accordance with previous studies, we find that young individuals have greater mobility than older individuals. However, the spatial extent of juvenile movements depends on natal colony location, with a strong difference in the proportion of sedentary individuals among colonies less than 50 km apart. Colony quality or local population dynamics may explain these differences. Indeed, young birds from colonies with strong juvenile survival probabilities (~ 0.75) appear to be more sedentary than those from colonies with low survival probabilities (~ 0.36).
This study shows the importance of studying individuals of different ages and from different colonies when trying to understand seabird movement strategies. Local breeding success and the availability of food resources may explain part of the among colony differences we observe and require explicit testing. We discuss our results with respect to the feedback loop that may occur between breeding success and mobility, and its potential implications for population demography and the dissemination of avian disease at different spatial scales.
与其他生活史特征一样,动物的运动模式存在差异,这对种群动态和群落相互作用具有重要影响。个体在季节性移动(或迁徙)的程度上可能表现出差异,或者在不同年份间改变迁徙路线。年龄或身体状况等内在因素可能会强烈影响运动模式的变化。事实上,与成年个体相比,年轻个体往往倾向于在更大的空间尺度上移动,但相对较少的研究调查了驱动这种差异的近端和终极因素。对于海鸟来说尤其如此,因为亚成年期较长且难以追踪。在这里,我们研究了一种常见的地中海海鸟——黄腿鸥(Larus michahellis)的迁徙差异及其影响因素。
数据包括1999年至2004年间在法国南部14个不同繁殖地标记为雏鸟的5158只鸟的遭遇记录,并在10年时间里对其进行了重新观察。使用多事件标记重捕建模框架,我们利用这些数据来估计移动和存活的概率,同时考虑重捕异质性和年龄因素。
与之前的研究一致,我们发现年轻个体比年长个体具有更大的移动性。然而,幼鸟移动的空间范围取决于出生地繁殖地的位置,相距不到50公里的繁殖地之间定居个体的比例存在很大差异。繁殖地质量或当地种群动态可能解释了这些差异。事实上,来自幼鸟存活率较高(约0.75)的繁殖地的幼鸟似乎比来自存活率较低(约0.36)的繁殖地的幼鸟更倾向于定居。
这项研究表明,在试图理解海鸟运动策略时,研究不同年龄和来自不同繁殖地的个体非常重要。当地的繁殖成功率和食物资源的可获得性可能解释了我们观察到的繁殖地之间差异的部分原因,需要进行明确的测试。我们讨论了我们的结果与繁殖成功率和移动性之间可能存在的反馈回路,以及它在不同空间尺度上对种群动态和禽流感传播的潜在影响。