Abstract

Afro‐Palaearctic migrants are declining to a greater degree than other European species, suggesting that processes occurring inAfrica or on migration may be driving these trends. Constraints on food availability on the wintering grounds may contribute to these declines but little is known about when and where these resource constraints may occur. Sufficient resources are particularly important prior to spring migration, when migrants must cross the Sahara Desert. We examined mass gain and departure phenology in a long‐distance Palaearctic passerine migrant to determine the degree to which pre‐migratory fattening occurs in their long‐term non‐breeding territories in theGuineaSavannah region ofAfrica. We monitored 75WhinchatsSaxicola rubetrafor departure from their non‐breeding territories in one spring, and analysed mass data of 377 Whinchats collected over three non‐breeding seasons plus 141 migratingWhinchats caught inApril over 8 years, all within the same few square kilometres of human‐modifiedGuineaSavannah in centralNigeria.Whinchats left their winter territories throughoutApril, with males departing on average 8 days earlier than females. However, there was no evidence that time of departure from territory was linked to age, body size or mass at capture. Whinchats departed their territories with a predicted mass of 16.8 ± 0.3 g, considerably less than thec. 24 g required for the average Whinchat to cross the Sahara directly. Comparing departure dates with arrival dates in southern Europe showed a discrepancy of at least 2 weeks, suggesting that manyWhinchats spend considerable time on pre‐migratory fuelling outside their winter territory prior to crossing theSahara. Overwintering birds gained mass slowly duringFebruary andMarch (0.03 g/day), and non‐territorial or migrating birds at a much higher rate inApril (at least 0.23 g/day), with up to 20% of migratingWhinchats inApril potentially having sufficient fuel loads to cross the Sahara directly from centralNigeria. Our results suggest that mostWhinchats leave their winter territories to fatten up locally or, possibly, by staging further north, closer to the southern limit of theSahara. Resource constraints are therefore likely to be particularly focused inWestAfrica during mid‐April and possibly at staging areas before the crossing of theSaharaDesert.

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