Abstract

When and where to move is a fundamental decision to migratory birds, and the fitness‐related costs and benefits of migratory choices make them subject to strong selective forces. Site use and migration routes are outcomes of opportunities in the surrounding landscape, and the optimal migration strategy may be conservative or explorative depending on the variability in the environment occupied by the species. This study applies 25 years of resighting data to examine development in winter migration strategy of pink‐footed geese divided among Denmark, the Netherlands and Belgium, and analyse potential drivers of strategy change as well as individuals’ likelihood to break with migratory tradition. Contrary with the general notion that geese are highly traditional in their winter site use, our results reveal that winter migration strategy is highly dynamic in this species, with an average annual probability of changing strategy of 54%. Strategy was not related to hunting pressure or winter temperature, but could be partly explained by a tracking of food resources in a landscape of rapid land use changes. The probability of individuals changing strategy from year to year varied considerably between birds, and was partly related to sex and age, with young males being the most likely to change. The annual probability of changing wintering strategy increased substantially from ≈40% to ≈60% during the study period, indicating an increasingly explorative behaviour. Our findings demonstrate that individual winter strategies are very flexible and able to change over time, suggesting that phenotypic plasticity and cultural transmission are important drivers of strategy choice in this species. Growing benefits from exploratory behaviours, including the ability to track rapid land use changes, may ultimately result in increased resilience to global change.

Highlights

  • One of the most fundamental decisions faced by animals is movement in time and space

  • We re-ran the models for these two regions omitting the years from 2007 onwards. This procedure indicated that usage of Friesland was unaffected by land use changes, while usage of Flanders was linearly positively related to the area of maize and grassland (Table 2)

  • Our results illustrate that choice of wintering strategy among pinkfooted geese is flexible and dynamic

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

One of the most fundamental decisions faced by animals is movement in time and space. We aim to (i) Describe the development in wintering strategy for this population during the period 1990–2015, (ii) Investigate how propensity to change strategy has developed during the last 25 years, (iii) Explore the effects of age, sex, breeding status and previous migratory choices on the tendency to change strategy, and (iv) Test whether strategy choice was related to the environmental factors hunting pressure, winter temperature and land use In this connection we hypothesized that (i) Increasing hunting pressure in one region would cause birds to depart from this area, (ii) Cold winters would cause a southward shift in wintering site use and (iii) Changes in the available area of favoured crops, such as cereals and maize, would cause geese to gather in regions of high food availability

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| RESULTS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call