Abstract

For the study of migratory connectivity, birds have been individually marked by metal rings for more than 100 years. The resulting ring recovery data have been compiled in numerous bird migration atlases. However, estimation of what proportion of a particular population is migrating to which region is confounded by spatial heterogeneity in ring recovery probability. We present a product multinomial model that enables quantifying the continent-wide distribution of different bird populations during different seasons based on ring recovery data while accounting for spatial heterogeneity of ring recovery probability. We applied the model to an example data set of the European robin Erithacus rubecula. We assumed that ring recovery probability was equal between different groups of birds and that survival probability was constant. Simulated data indicate that violation of the assumption of constant survival did not affect our estimated bird distribution parameters but biased the estimates for recovery probability. Posterior predictive model checking indicated a good general model fit but also revealed lack of fit for a few groups of birds. This lack of fit may be due to between-group differences in the spatial distribution on smaller scales within regions. We found that 48% of the Scandinavian robins, but only 31% of the central European robins, wintered in northern Africa. The remaining parts of both populations wintered in southern and central Europe. Therefore, a substantial part of the Scandinavian population appears to leap over individuals from the central European population during migration. The model is applied to summary tables of numbers of ringed and recovered birds. This allows us to handle very large data sets as, for example, those presented in bird migration atlases.

Highlights

  • The study of migratory connectivity is important to understand the ecology and population dynamics of species (Webster et al 2002)

  • An ideal technique to study bird migration would be a device that is so small that it could be carried by small migratory species without affecting their behavior, while allowing long-distance tracking with high precision (Robinson et al 2010)

  • We used ringing and recovery data for the European robin, which were kindly provided by the ringing stations Ottenby, Falsterbo, and Christianso€ (Denmark) and the ringing schemes Hiddensee (Germany) and Switzerland (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The study of migratory connectivity is important to understand the ecology and population dynamics of species (Webster et al 2002). An ideal technique to study bird migration would be a device that is so small that it could be carried by small migratory species without affecting their behavior, while allowing long-distance tracking with high precision (Robinson et al 2010). Such a device does not yet exist (Robinson et al 2010). The existing tracking techniques are subject to a trade-off between weight and temporal and spatial precision of the measurements

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