TY - JOUR
T1 - Autumn migratory orientation and displacement responses of two willow warbler subspecies (Phylloscopus trochilus trochilus and P. t. acredula) in South Sweden
AU - Ilieva, Mihaela
AU - Toews, David P.L.
AU - Bensch, Staffan
AU - Sjöholm, Christoffer
AU - Åkesson, Susanne
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to the ringers at Ottenby Bird Observatory, Petra Carlsson, Keith Larson and Max Lundberg for assistance in the field and Nils Müller and Jane Jönsson for their help in the molecular laboratory. We particularly thank the two anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments on the manuscript. The project was financed by a project grants (No. 621-2007-5930 , 621-2010-5584 ) from the Swedish Research Council to SÅ, project grant D002-277 from Bulgarian Science Fund and partly by FP7 Capacities project WETLANET to MI. D.P.L.T. was supported with a grant from the National Science and Engineering Council of Canada (a CGS-D and a Michael Smith Foreign Study Scholarship). This is a report from the Centre for Animal Movement Research (CAnMove) financed by a Linnaeus grant (No. 349-2007-8690 ) from the Swedish Research Council and Lund University . This is contribution no. 261 from Ottenby Bird Observatory.
PY - 2012/11
Y1 - 2012/11
N2 - Topography and historical range expansion has formed a so-called migratory divide between two subspecies of willow warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus) in central Scandinavia. The autumn migratory directions of individuals assigned molecularly to both subspecies and possible hybrids were recorded using orientation cage experiments in southwest and southeast Sweden. We found pronounced differences in willow warblers' orientation in respect to genotype. The mean directions registered in the control experiments were in accordance with the ringing recoveries and analyses of stable isotopes for Scandinavian willow warblers. With the same individuals we performed displacement experiments between both sites. They resulted in non-significant orientation, which could be explained by the intermediate distance of the displacement or reactions to housing, transportation and location. On a separate set of birds we tested whether stress following transportation could explain the disorientation and found that orientation before and after transport was unchanged. Experimental studies of effects of intermediate displacements across longitudes and studies of orientation of hybrid individuals in the zones of migratory divides are crucial for understanding the mechanisms underlying orientation behaviour. Our work further stresses the importance of knowing the migration genotype of a particular bird under study, in order to correctly evaluate expected migration routes.
AB - Topography and historical range expansion has formed a so-called migratory divide between two subspecies of willow warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus) in central Scandinavia. The autumn migratory directions of individuals assigned molecularly to both subspecies and possible hybrids were recorded using orientation cage experiments in southwest and southeast Sweden. We found pronounced differences in willow warblers' orientation in respect to genotype. The mean directions registered in the control experiments were in accordance with the ringing recoveries and analyses of stable isotopes for Scandinavian willow warblers. With the same individuals we performed displacement experiments between both sites. They resulted in non-significant orientation, which could be explained by the intermediate distance of the displacement or reactions to housing, transportation and location. On a separate set of birds we tested whether stress following transportation could explain the disorientation and found that orientation before and after transport was unchanged. Experimental studies of effects of intermediate displacements across longitudes and studies of orientation of hybrid individuals in the zones of migratory divides are crucial for understanding the mechanisms underlying orientation behaviour. Our work further stresses the importance of knowing the migration genotype of a particular bird under study, in order to correctly evaluate expected migration routes.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.beproc.2012.09.005
DO - 10.1016/j.beproc.2012.09.005
M3 - Article
C2 - 23022572
AN - SCOPUS:84868213260
SN - 0376-6357
VL - 91
SP - 253
EP - 261
JO - Behavioural Processes
JF - Behavioural Processes
IS - 3
ER -