Abstract

Sex- and age-specific differences in the timing of migration are widespread among animals. In birds, common patterns are protandry, the earlier arrival of males in spring, and age-differential migration during autumn. However, knowledge of these differences stems mainly from the Palearctic-African and Nearctic-Neotropical flyways, while detailed information about the phenology of migrant birds from the East Asian flyway is far scarcer. To help fill parts of this gap, we analyzed how migration distance, sex, age, and molt strategy affect the spring and autumn phenologies of 36 migrant songbirds (altogether 18,427 individuals) at a stopover site in the Russian Far East. Sex-differential migration was more pronounced in spring than in autumn, with half of the studied species (6 out of 12) showing a protandrous migration pattern. Age-differences in migration were rare in spring but found in nearly half of the studied species (11 out of 25) in autumn. These age effects were associated with the birds’ molt strategy and the mean latitudinal distances from the assumed breeding area to the study site. Adults performing a complete molt before the onset of autumn migration passed the study site later than first-year birds undergoing only a partial molt. This pattern, however, reversed with increasing migration distance to the study site. These sex-, age-, and molt-specific migration patterns agree with those found along other flyways and seem to be common features of land bird migration strategies.Significance statementThe timing of animal migration is shaped by the availability of resources and the organization of annual cycles. In migrant birds, sex- and age-differential migration is a common phenomenon. For the rarely studied East Asian flyway, we show for the first time and based on a large set of migrant songbirds that earlier migration of males is a common pattern there in spring. Further, the timing and extent of molt explained age-differential migration during autumn. Adults molting their complete plumage at the breeding area before migration showed delayed phenology in comparison to first-year birds, which perform only a partial molt. This pattern, however, reversed with increasing migration distance to the study site. Since our results agree with the general patterns from the other migration flyways, similar drivers for differential migration may act across different flyway systems, provoking a similar evolutionary response.

Highlights

  • The annual migrations of billions of animals have evolved to allow sexual partners to meet and mate where favorable environmental conditions prevail in order to successfully raise their offspring (Milner-Gulland et al 2011; Dingle 2014)

  • A significant two-way interaction between sex and age was found in the Yellow-browed Bunting Emberiza chrysophrys: > 2 cy males migrated significantly earlier than > 2 cy females (LM: Estimate: 7.6 days, 95%credible intervals (CrI): 4.6/10.3), whereas no such sex difference was found in 2 cy birds (LM: Estimate: 1.5, 95%CrI: −2.5/5.6) (Online Resource 1G)

  • This study demonstrates that the approximated migration distance and/or the breeding latitude significantly affects the migration phenology of songbird species along the East Asian flyway, with shorter distances and/or lower breeding latitudes yielding early spring passage and late autumn passage (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The annual migrations of billions of animals have evolved to allow sexual partners to meet and mate where favorable environmental conditions prevail in order to successfully raise their offspring (Milner-Gulland et al 2011; Dingle 2014). Two hypotheses are used to explain the ultimate causes of protandry in birds, namely the mate opportunity hypothesis and the rank advantage hypothesis (Morbey and Ydenberg 2001; Kokko et al 2006). The former states that selection is acting “on males to arrive earlier than females to maximise their mating opportunity” (Morbey and Ydenberg 2001), while the latter suggests that selection is acting on the territorial sex to advance their arrival in comparison to competitors. When acting alone, the rank advantage hypothesis consistently failed to yield protandry in a theoretical study (Kokko et al 2006)

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