نتایج جستجو برای: new wintering population

تعداد نتایج: 2458768  

Journal: :Global change biology 2013
Aleksi Lehikoinen Kim Jaatinen Anssi V Vähätalo Preben Clausen Olivia Crowe Bernard Deceuninck Richard Hearn Chas A Holt Menno Hornman Verena Keller Leif Nilsson Tom Langendoen Irena Tománková Johannes Wahl Anthony D Fox

Climate change is predicted to cause changes in species distributions and several studies report margin range shifts in some species. However, the reported changes rarely concern a species' entire distribution and are not always linked to climate change. Here, we demonstrate strong north-eastwards shifts in the centres of gravity of the entire wintering range of three common waterbird species a...

2015
Cristina Ramo Juan A. Amat Leif Nilsson Vincent Schricke Mariano Rodríguez-Alonso Enrique Gómez-Crespo Fernando Jubete Juan G. Navedo José A. Masero Jesús Palacios Mathieu Boos Andy J. Green Roberto Ambrosini

The unusually high quality of census data for large waterbirds in Europe facilitates the study of how population change varies across a broad geographical range and relates to global change. The wintering population of the greylag goose Anser anser in the Atlantic flyway spanning between Sweden and Spain has increased from 120 000 to 610 000 individuals over the past three decades, and expanded...

2008
KEVIN WINKER JOHN H. RAPPOLE

The possession of a suitable spot on the wintering grounds may be important for an individual's survival in migrant species showing territoriality in the nonbreeding season (e.g., Rappole et al. 1989, Winker et al. 1990). If the earliest arrivals are favored in securing the best winter territories (e.g., Smallwood 1988), then selection might favor individuals who quickly return to wintering are...

2015
Keith A. Hobson Kevin J. Kardynal Steven L. Van Wilgenburg Gretchen Albrecht Antonio Salvadori Michael D. Cadman Felix Liechti James W. Fox R. Mark Brigham

Populations of most North American aerial insectivores have undergone steep population declines over the past 40 years but the relative importance of factors operating on breeding, wintering, or stopover sites remains unknown. We used archival light-level geolocators to track the phenology, movements and winter locations of barn swallows (Hirdundo rustica; n = 27) from populations across North ...

Journal: :Science 2002
D R Rubenstein C P Chamberlain R T Holmes M P Ayres J R Waldbauer G R Graves N C Tuross

We used the natural abundance of stable isotopes (carbon and hydrogen) in the feathers of a neotropical migrant songbird to determine where birds from particular breeding areas spend the winter and the extent to which breeding populations mix in winter quarters. We show that most birds wintering on western Caribbean islands come from the northern portion of the species' North American breeding ...

2013
Gabriel J. Colorado Paul B. Hamel Amanda D. Rodewald David Mehlman

– Recent population declines have prompted the International Union for the Conservation of Nature to list Cerulean Warbler (Setophaga cerulea: Parulidae) as a Vulnerable species. It is believed that this decline may be related to habitat loss through its entire range, mainly due to deforestation and degradation of its habitats. In response, members of El Grupo Cerúleo, a subcommittee of the Cer...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1989
C S Robbins J R Sauer R S Greenberg S Droege

Using data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey, we determined that most neotropical migrant bird species that breed in forests of the eastern United States and Canada have recently (1978-1987) declined in abundance after a period of stable or increasing populations. Most permanent residents and temperate-zone migrants did not show a general pattern of decrease during this period. Field...

2016
Mitch D. Weegman Stuart Bearhop Anthony D. Fox Geoff M. Hilton Alyn J. Walsh Jennifer L. McDonald David J. Hodgson

Demographic links among fragmented populations are commonly studied as source-sink dynamics, whereby source populations exhibit net recruitment and net emigration, while sinks suffer net mortality but enjoy net immigration. It is commonly assumed that large, persistent aggregations of individuals must be sources, but this ignores the possibility that they are sinks instead, buoyed demographical...

2017
Bradley K. Woodworth Nathaniel T. Wheelwright Amy E. Newman Michael Schaub D. Ryan Norris

Understanding the factors that limit and regulate wildlife populations requires insight into demographic and environmental processes acting throughout the annual cycle. Here, we combine multi-year tracking data of individual birds with a 26-year demographic study of a migratory songbird to evaluate the relative effects of density and weather at the breeding and wintering grounds on population g...

2012
PABLO ALMARAZ

1. A statistical model is developed for the globally threatened white-headed duck during its regional expansion throughout Spain from 1980 to 2000; the model estimates the relative intrinsic, climatic and stochastic effects on population fluctuations and spatial expansion on several time-scales. Facing the current lack of knowledge on the nature and consequences of regulation for waterfowl popu...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید