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Early
Environment May Be Key to Migration Location
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
The
American Redstart Setophaga
ruticilla
How young migrating birds
choose the nesting location of their first breeding season has
been something of a mystery in the bird world. But a new study of
the American redstart by the University of Maryland and
Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center of the National Zoo suggests
that the environmental conditions the birds face in their first
year may help determine where they breed for the rest of their
lives, a factor that could significantly affect the population as
climate change makes their winter habitats hotter and drier.
"We
found that where the birds go in their first winter, a process
called natal dispersal, may determine the area, within several
hundred miles, where they will breed over their lifetime,"
said Colin Studds, the University of Maryland PhD student who led
the study. "An important factor appears to be the
availability of water in their winter habitat."
The
study appears in the February 19 issue of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences .
Co-authors of the paper are Peter Marra, of the Smithsonian
Migratory Bird Center, and Kurt Kyser, of Queen's University,
Ontario .
The
Rich Get Richer
The
American redstart is a warbler that migrates between breeding
grounds in North America and winter spots in the Caribbean and
South America. The team studied redstarts that winter over in
Jamaica in two very different habitats that are right next to
each other.
"One is a very lush
mangrove with water and lots of insects for the birds to eat,"
Studds said. "Right beside it is a fairly harsh dry habitat,
with very little water and not as good a food supply."
By
studying the tail feathers of young redstarts between their first
and subsequent summer nestings, the researchers found that the
difference between wintering over in the lush mangrove or in the
drier real estate next door may help set off a lifelong cycle of
habitat location.
The
mangrove birds leave earlier to breed, don't migrate as far
north, and return to the water and food-rich mangrove. The birds
from the lower rent district leave later for breeding grounds,
must migrate farther north, and when they return to Jamaica, the
mangrove is occupied and they are, once again, scrabbling in the
scrub.
The
Cycle
The
cycle begins for the young redstart when it leaves its northern
birthplace and migrates south for its first winter. Studds' team
measured a hydrogen isotope called deuterium, found in the
fledglings' tail feathers, an indicator of where the bird was
hatched and, in subsequent summers, where it breeds. "Once
the isotope in the feathers, it doesn't change," Studds
says.
The
isotope measurement showed that the birds that had the good
fortune to spend their first winter in the mangrove stayed in the
good life, while the birds that had wintered in the dry area
usually had a harder life year round.
"The
birds in the lush mangrove have access to more insects, which
helps them maintain their weight," says Studds. "This
helps them to leave sooner on spring migration and arrive sooner
in the more southern breeding areas, where spring is just
beginning,"
The
birds in the dry area, however, need about another seven days to
bulk up, "a long time," says Studds. The later start
means that by the time they head north, the southern breeding
habitat is already taken and the birds have to keep flying, some
as far north as Canada, to find the right spring conditions for
breeding.
Where
a redstart spends its first winter also seems to be determined,
in part, by its ability hold its territory. "About 70
percent of the birds in the mangrove are males," Studds
says. "In the harsh habitat, they were mostly females and
young males."
Climate
Change and the Redstart
While
these redstarts appear to be thriving today, the research team
says their findings point to the need to consider conservation
measures in the winter habitat.
"The models predict
increasing drought in the Caribbean," says Studds. "Rain
is very important to these birds. If their winter habitat gets
drier and their departure dates get later, populations in
southern areas could see big declines."
The
team next hopes next to research the redstart's breeding grounds.
"By analyzing isotopes in feathers of redstarts arriving to
breed in Maryland, we plan to ask whether birds dispersing here
from northern areas spent the winter in different habitats
compared to birds dispersing from southern areas," Studds
says.
Colin
Studds is a PhD student in the University's Behavior, Ecology,
Evolution and Systematics Program (BEES) program, which partners
with the Smithsonian Institution on many research projects.
Source:
University of Maryland

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