Dr. Matt Reudink

Professor



Faculty of Science

Thompson Rivers University


Evolution of moult-migration is directly linked to aridity of the breeding grounds in North American passerines


Journal article


C. Pageau, C. Tonra, M. Shaikh, N. J. Flood, M. Reudink
Biology Letters, 2020

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Pageau, C., Tonra, C., Shaikh, M., Flood, N. J., & Reudink, M. (2020). Evolution of moult-migration is directly linked to aridity of the breeding grounds in North American passerines. Biology Letters.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Pageau, C., C. Tonra, M. Shaikh, N. J. Flood, and M. Reudink. “Evolution of Moult-Migration Is Directly Linked to Aridity of the Breeding Grounds in North American Passerines.” Biology Letters (2020).


MLA   Click to copy
Pageau, C., et al. “Evolution of Moult-Migration Is Directly Linked to Aridity of the Breeding Grounds in North American Passerines.” Biology Letters, 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{c2020a,
  title = {Evolution of moult-migration is directly linked to aridity of the breeding grounds in North American passerines},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {Biology Letters},
  author = {Pageau, C. and Tonra, C. and Shaikh, M. and Flood, N. J. and Reudink, M.}
}

Abstract

To avoid energy allocation conflicts, birds generally separate breeding, migration and moult during the annual cycle. North American passerines typically moult on the breeding grounds prior to autumn migration. However, some have evolved a moult-migration strategy in which they delay moult until stopping over during autumn migration. Rohwer et al. (2005) proposed the ‘push–pull hypothesis' as an explanation for the evolution of this moult strategy, but it has not been empirically tested. Poor conditions on the breeding grounds at the end of the summer would push birds to depart prior to moult, while productive stopover locations would pull them. We tested for a relationship between moult-migration and breeding grounds aridity as measured by the normalized difference vegetation index. Our results strongly support the ‘push' aspect of the push–pull hypothesis and indicate that arid breeding grounds, primarily in western North America, would drive species to evolve stopover moult-migration, although this relationship may depend upon migration distance.





Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in