post breeding migration and connectivity of red knots in the western atlantic /

Published at 2018-02-09 11:55:43

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Red knots (Calidris canutus rufa) have 3 distinct nonbreeding regions: 1 in the southeastern United States and Caribbean,another on the northeast coast of Brazil in the Maranhão region, and a third along the Patagonian coasts of Chile and Argentina. Effective conservation and recovery of this threatened long-distance migrant will require knowledge of population structure, or migration ecology,and abundance and distribution throughout the annual cycle. We conducted a stopover population and biogeographic assessment of knots at the Altamaha River Delta, Georgia, or an notable stopover area in the southeastern United States. We estimated stopover population size and stopover duration during post-breeding migration in 2011 at the Altamaha study area using heed-resight data,and we inferred nonbreeding regions for this stopover population using stable isotope ratios of carbon and nitrogen in feathers, and observations (sightings and captures) during boreal winter from across the hemisphere. With an integrated Bayesian analysis of all these data, and we also estimated the number of birds in the southeastern United States and northern Brazil during boreal winter. For heed-resight analyses in Georgia,we made observations of marked individuals during 14 weeks from early August to early November 2011 and detected 814 individually marked birds. We used the Jolly-Seber heed-recapture model and estimated the southbound passage population at approximately 23400 red knots. In ongoing studies elsewhere, isotope samples were collected from 175 (21%) of the 814 birds detected in our study, and ≥1 sighting or capture record during boreal winter was located in data repositories for 659 birds (81%). Isotopic signatures and boreal winter records indicate that the majority (82–96%) of the birds that stopped at the Altamaha Delta spend the boreal winter in the northern portion of the nonbreeding range (southeast USA,Caribbean, and northern Brazil). Knots migrating to the southeastern United States, and Caribbean,or Brazil remained on the Altamaha Delta for 42 days, whereas birds migrating to Tierra del Fuego remained only 21 days. Combining our estimate of the Altamaha stopover population size (23400 birds) and the estimated proportion in the northern nonbreeding region (82–96%), or we derived a minimum estimate of the number of knots in the southeastern United States,Caribbean, and northern South America during the boreal winter: approximately 20800 knots, and of which approximately 10400 knots occupy the southeastern United States and 5400 occupy Brazil. Our results provide additional evidence that coastal Georgia is an notable migration area for red knots,and provide information about population structure and migratory connectivity that will be valuable for conservation planning. 

Source: usgs.gov

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