Abstract

Simple SummaryThe migration strategies and activity patterns of the Chinese Sparrowhawk, a small raptor species, remain unknown. Long-distance migratory birds have the habit of using stop-over sites during migration in order to help them supplement energy and restore their physical strength. We put GPS satellite positioning devices on Chinese Sparrowhawks, with the objective of determining when they start their migration, the route, whether they stopped during migration, habitat preferences, and where they ultimately wintered. This was conducted to help us understand the entire migration strategy of the Chinese Sparrowhawk. At the same time, based on satellite location information, we constructed a comprehensive picture of its summer, winter, and stop-over home ranges, and explored the associated activity patterns.From 2018 to 2019, two Chinese Sparrowhawks (Bird 01, male; Bird 02, female), Accipiter soloensis, were captured and fitted with Global Positioning System (GPS) loggers in order to identify summering and wintering sites, migration routes, and stop-over sites. The Chinese Sparrowhawks were first fitted with backpack solar GPS satellite trackers in China in order to explore their migration routes. The two Chinese Sparrowhawks successfully completed their migration from southern China, through Nanning city of Guangxi province, China, to Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore and finally arriving in Indonesia, where they stayed until the March of the following year. They then returned to China along the original route, arriving in Changsha city, Hunan province, China. The two individuals traveled more than 4000–5000 km. For the first time, telemetry data demonstrate, the linkages between their Indonesia wintering sites, their stop-over sites in Southeast Asia, and their breeding/summering sites near south Yangtze River in the south-central part of China. During this long-distance migration, 2653 bird satellite sites were received. The autumn migration durations for the two Chinese Sparrowhawks were 84 days and 50 days, respectively, compared to 83 days and 49 days in spring. The median stop-over duration was 12.7 and 9.3 days, respectively and the median speed of travel was 74.2 km/day during the autumn migration and 73.9 km/day during the spring migration. Furthermore, two and one stop-over sites and one and three stop-over sites were used during the autumn and spring migrations of Chinese Sparrowhawks 01 and 02, respectively. The Chinese Sparrowhawks migrated long distances and used stop-over sites during their migration. Based on the home range analysis, we can conclude that Chinese Sparrowhawks reach their maximum home range in the summer and have multiple nuclear domains.

Highlights

  • Chinese Sparrowhawks are widely distributed in southern China, most of which are summer migratory birds

  • We obtained complete spring and autumn migration tracks from the two individuals based on the Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite data; that is, we obtained two autumn and two spring migration tracks from two different individuals

  • We studied the migration route and migration strategies from summering sites to wintering sites of the Chinese Sparrowhawk, based on GPS satellite data

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Summary

Introduction

Chinese Sparrowhawks are widely distributed in southern China, most of which are summer migratory birds. Often living in the relatively open forestland, mountains, forests, farmland, villages, and so on, they may form a small group (or, even, large groups) during their migration in the spring and autumn [2]. The Chinese Sparrowhawk is a small-sized raptor, whose breeding sites— imprecisely known—are in China and Korea, and whose wintering sites are thought to be mainly in the Philippines and in eastern Indonesia [3]. Recent migration research [8] has shown that at least 350,000 individuals of this species migrate to eastern Indonesia each autumn, through both the Sangihe Talaud Archipelago in the north and Bali in the west

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