Year-round activity levels reveal diurnal foraging constraints in the annual cycle of migratory and non-migratory barnacle geese

被引:0
|
作者
Michiel P. Boom
Thomas K. Lameris
Kees H. T. Schreven
Nelleke H. Buitendijk
Sander Moonen
Peter P. de Vries
Elmira Zaynagutdinova
Bart A. Nolet
Henk P. van der Jeugd
Götz Eichhorn
机构
[1] Vogeltrekstation—Dutch Centre for Avian Migration and Demography (NIOO-KNAW),Department of Animal Ecology
[2] Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW),Theoretical and Computational Ecology, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics
[3] University of Amsterdam,Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology
[4] NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research,undefined
[5] Wageningen Environmental Reseach (WEnR),undefined
[6] Institute of Avian Research,undefined
[7] Institute for Wetlands and Waterbird Research e.V.,undefined
[8] Saint Petersburg State University,undefined
来源
Oecologia | 2023年 / 202卷
关键词
Annual cycle; Day length; Foraging; Migration; Residency;
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学科分类号
摘要
Performing migratory journeys comes with energetic costs, which have to be compensated within the annual cycle. An assessment of how and when such compensation occurs is ideally done by comparing full annual cycles of migratory and non-migratory individuals of the same species, which is rarely achieved. We studied free-living migratory and resident barnacle geese belonging to the same flyway (metapopulation), and investigated when differences in foraging activity occur, and when foraging extends beyond available daylight, indicating a diurnal foraging constraint in these usually diurnal animals. We compared foraging activity of migratory (N = 94) and resident (N = 30) geese throughout the annual cycle using GPS-transmitters and 3D-accelerometers, and corroborated this with data on seasonal variation in body condition. Migratory geese were more active than residents during most of the year, amounting to a difference of over 370 h over an entire annual cycle. Activity differences were largest during the periods that comprised preparation for spring and autumn migration. Lengthening days during spring facilitated increased activity, which coincided with an increase in body condition. Both migratory and resident geese were active at night during winter, but migratory geese were also active at night before autumn migration, resulting in a period of night-time activity that was 6 weeks longer than in resident geese. Our results indicate that, at least in geese, seasonal migration requires longer daily activity not only during migration but throughout most of the annual cycle, with migrants being more frequently forced to extend foraging activity into the night.
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页码:287 / 298
页数:11
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