Abstract

AbstractThe Pacific Basin, by virtue of its vastness and its complex aeroscape, provides unique opportunities to address questions about the behavioral and physiological capabilities and mechanisms through which birds can complete spectacular flights. No longer is the Pacific seen just as a formidable barrier between terrestrial habitats in the north and the south, but rather as a gateway for specialized species, such as shorebirds, to make a living on hemispherically distributed seasonal resources. This recent change in perspective is dramatic, and the research that underpins it has presented new opportunities to learn about phenomena that often challenge a sense of normal. Ancient Polynesians were aware of the seasonal passage of shorebirds and other landbirds over the Pacific Ocean, incorporating these observations into their navigational “tool kit” as they explored and colonized the Pacific. Some ten centuries later, systematic visual observations and tracking technology have revealed much about movement of these shorebirds, especially the enormity of their individual nonstop flights. This invites a broad suite of questions, often requiring comparative studies with bird migration across other ocean basins, or across continents. For example, how do birds manage many days of nonstop exercise apparently without sleep? What mechanisms explain birds acting as if they possess a Global Positioning System? How do such extreme migrations evolve? Through advances in both theory and tracking technology, biologists are poised to greatly expand the horizons of movement ecology as we know it. In this integrative review, we present a series of intriguing questions about trans-Pacific migrant shorebirds and summarize recent advances in knowledge about migratory behavior operating at temporal scales ranging from immediate decisions during a single flight, to adaptive learning throughout a lifetime, to evolutionary development of migratory pathways. Recent advances in this realm should stimulate future research across the globe and across a broad array of disciplines.

Highlights

  • Research over the past three decades has revealed the extraordinary physiological and cognitive capabilities of migratory birds

  • The Pacific is an “ecological theater,” and the birds living their lives in this area have upended previously supposed limits on fuel stores (Piersma and Gill 1998), flight range and endurance exercise (Gill et al 2009, Piersma 2011b), wind and weather forecasting (Gill et al 2014), and navigational achievements (Williams and Williams 1999). It is in this light that we review the seasonal migrations of a group of terrestrial birds, the shorebirds, that move across and around the largest water body on Earth, the Pacific Ocean, and examine the unique features of the extreme migrations that occur there

  • Using Hogan’s (2017) formal behavioral framework, we present some key findings from recent research in the Pacific Basin and the intriguing questions about migratory behavior that have resulted

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Summary

Avian migration across the Pacific

Le Pacifique, plus grand théâtre de migration d’oiseaux au monde: des vols extrêmes suscitent des questions sur les capacités physiologiques, le comportement et l’évolution des voies migratoires. RÉSUMÉ Le bassin du Pacifique, en raison de son immensité et de son paysage aérien complexe, offre des opportunités uniques d’aborder les questions relatives aux capacités et mécanismes comportementaux et physiologiques grâce auxquels les oiseaux peuvent effectuer des vols spectaculaires. Nous présentons une série de questions intrigantes sur les limicoles migrateurs transpacifiques et nous résumons les progrès récents des connaissances sur le comportement migratoire à des échelles temporelles allant des décisions immédiates pendant un seul vol à l’apprentissage adaptatif tout au long de la vie, en passant par le développement évolutif des voies migratoires. Mots-clés: atmosphère, changements climatiques, biologie comparative, cognition, conservation, évolution, phylogéographie, limicoles

INTRODUCTION
A BEHAVIORAL FRAMEWORK FOR RESEARCH QUESTIONS
A CHRONOLOGY OF HUMAN AWARENESS OF LANDBIRDS AT SEA
Findings
GENERAL DISCUSSION
Full Text
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