Abstract

In migratory birds, morphological adaptations for efficient migratory flight often oppose morphological adaptations for efficient behavior during resident periods. This includes adaptations in wing shape for either flying long distances or foraging in the vegetation and in climate-driven variation of body size. In addition, the timing of migratory flights and particularly the timely arrival at local breeding sites is crucial because fitness prospects depend on site-specific phenology. Thus, adaptations for efficient long-distance flights might be also related to conditions at destination areas. For an obligatory long-distance migrant, the common nightingale, we verified that wing length as the aerodynamically important trait, but not structural body size increased from the western to the eastern parts of the species range. In contrast with expectation from aerodynamic theory, however, wing length did not increase with increasing migration distances. Instead, wing length was associated with the phenology at breeding destinations, namely the speed of local spring green-up. We argue that longer wings are beneficial for adjusting migration speed to local conditions for birds breeding in habitats with fast spring green-up and thus short optimal arrival periods. We suggest that the speed of spring green-up at breeding sites is a fundamental variable determining the timing of migration that fine tune phenotypes in migrants across their range.

Highlights

  • Ecological morphology and life history are main aspects in migration ecology dealing with different but interacting traits

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • We found a significant positive association between wing length and longitude with shorter wings in western populations and longer wings in eastern populations (Fig. 2), but we did not find a similar relation with latitude or any significant interactions of longitude, latitude and sex (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Ecological morphology and life history are main aspects in migration ecology dealing with different but interacting traits. Ecomorphology focuses on the interrelationship of morphological variation among individuals, populations and species and the corresponding variation in their ecology (Leisler and Winkler 1985, 2003). A prominent example for this is the pointedness of wings of birds that corresponds to their migratory behavior (e.g., Kipp 1959; Fiedler 2005; Fo€rschler and Bairlein 2011). The life-history perspective though focuses on the adaptive value of individual behavior, especially in timing of migration (Smith and Moore 2005). Morphology and life a 2015 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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