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Migratory species are changing their timing of departure from wintering areas and arrival to breeding sites (i.e. migration phenology) in response to climate change to exploit maximum food availability at higher latitudes and improve their fitness. Despite the impact of changing migration phenology at population and community level, the extent to which individual and species-specific response affects associations among co-migrating species has been seldom explored. By applying temporal co-occurrence network models on 15 years of standardized bird ringing data at a spring stopover site, we show that African-European migratory landbirds tend to migrate in well-defined groups of species with high temporal overlap. Such 'co-migration fidelity' significantly increased over the years and was higher in long-distance (trans-Saharan) than in short-distance (North African) migrants. Our findings suggest non-random patterns of associations in co-migrating species, possibly related to the existence of regulatory mechanisms associated with changing climate conditions and different uses of stopover sites, ultimately influencing the global economy of migration of landbirds in the Palearctic-African migration system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.221043 | DOI Listing |
Biodivers Data J
July 2025
Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia Bulgaria.
Background: Wader populations have been declining globally due to widespread anthropogenic habitat degradation and loss. In this context, food quality and availability at migration stop-over sites is crucial for wader migration success.We studied the diet composition and preferences of the Grey plover () at a stop-over site on the Black Sea-Mediterranean Flyway - Pomorie Lake, SW Black Sea coast, Bulgaria - through DNA metabarcoding of faeces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
July 2025
Institute of Biology and Earth Sciences, University of the National Education Commission, Krakow, Podchorążych 2, 30-084 Krakow, Poland.
Cognitive abilities play a critical role for migratory birds encountering unfamiliar habitats at stop-over sites. We investigated factors (age, sex, fuel reserves, vertical/horizontal activity, and mercury level) affecting cognitive abilities behavior (problem-solving task-escaping from an experimental cage) in a long-distance migratory passerine, the sedge warbler () at an autumn stop-over site. During the experiment, after two minutes of acclimatization, we remotely opened the door of the cage and recorded whether each bird escaped or remained in the cage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
September 2025
Laboratório de Dinâmica de Populações Marinhas (DIMAR), Departamento de Pesca e Aquicultura (DEPAq), Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (UFRPE), Dois Irmãos, 52171-900, Recife, PE, Brazil; Programa de Pós-Graduação em Recursos Pesqueiros e Aquicultura (PPGRPAq), Universidade Federal Ru
The Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago (SPSPA) is a small, remote group of islands on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge that is home to many large-bodied migratory pelagic fishes. Here, we used the yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) as a model species to test the hypothesis that the SPSPA hosts subpopulations originating from other regions of the Atlantic based on the otolith chemistry. Juvenile yellowfin tunas were caught in the SPSPA over a one-year cycle, and their otoliths were analyzed using LA-ICPMS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
May 2025
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Sacramento, CA 95825, USA.
Drought and high-severity, stand-replacing wildfires can have substantial impacts on the composition of avian communities, including stop-over communities during migration. An inextricable link exists between drought and wildfire, each operating and impacting across different timescales. Many studies have found nonlinear avian abundance trends in breeding community time series data that include pre- and post-fire observations, describing an initial decrease in abundance followed by rapid increases that can attenuate over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
June 2025
RSPB Centre for Conservation Science, The Lodge, Sandy, Beds, United Kingdom.
Migrant birds in the Afro-Palearctic region are declining, so understanding general migration characteristics, such as site use, connectivity, and phenology is crucial for their conservation. We tracked 64 whinchats Saxicola rubetra, a declining Palearctic-breeding passerine, from non-breeding sites in Nigeria and Liberia, to Europe and back, in multiple years. We predicted differences, resulting from the geographical location of the two non-breeding sites, in location of respective breeding areas (migratory connectivity), number of non-breeding and stopover sites, migration distance and duration, degree of loop migration and phenology.
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