Abstract

To maintain and recover populations of migratory waders, we must identify the important stopover sites and habitat use along migration routes. However, we have little such information for waders that depend on inland freshwater areas compared with those that depend on coastal areas. Recent technological developments in tracking devices now allow us to define habitat use at a fine scale. In this study, we used GPS loggers to track both spring and autumn migration along the East Asian-Australasian flyway of the little ringed plover (Charadrius dubius) as birds moved to and from their breeding grounds, gravel riverbeds in Japan. The birds we tracked overwintered in the Philippines and made stopovers mainly in Taiwan and the Philippines. The most important habitat during the non-breeding season was rice paddy fields. Our findings imply that changes in agriculture management policy in the countries along the migration route could critically affect the migration of waders that depend on rice paddy fields. To maintain populations of migrant inland waders that move within the East Asian-Australasian flyway, it is necessary not only to sustain the breeding habitat but also wetlands including the rice paddy fields as foraging habitat for the non-breeding season.

Highlights

  • Migrant waders have been decreasing on a worldwide scale[1,2,3,4,5] due to various complex reasons[6], such as land-use change[2] and increasing human activity[4,5]

  • The migration ecology and route of the European C. d. curonicus population has been clarified by bird banding[22] and by tracking using geolocators[28]

  • Little is known about these aspects of the Asian population that move within the East Asian-Australasian flyway (EAAF), some information suggests the potential importance of several regions in the non-breeding season (Thailand, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Myanmar) and during migration (Thailand, Russia, and eastern China)[26]

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Summary

Introduction

Migrant waders have been decreasing on a worldwide scale[1,2,3,4,5] due to various complex reasons[6], such as land-use change[2] and increasing human activity[4,5]. We used GPS loggers to track several migrating little ringed plovers (Charadrius dubius) during their spring and autumn migrations This advanced www.nature.com/scientificreports tracking device can record the longitude and latitude directly with high accuracy (

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