| Literature DB >> 26692801 |
Piotr Zduniak1, Reuven Yosef2, Keith J Bensusan3, Charles E Perez4, Piotr Tryjanowski5.
Abstract
The Mediterranean Sea is known as an ecological barrier for numerous migratory birds flying from European breeding grounds to African wintering sites. Birds generally avoid migration over open sea and fly over land. In the Mediterranean Basin, few land bridges or bottlenecks for migratory birds exist. The narrowest are at the western and eastern extremes: the Strait of Gibraltar and Israel. Comparative studies between these locations are extremely rare to date. Therefore, in order to elucidate the differences between the two flyways, we compared data collected simultaneously for two sister leaf warbler species, the Bonelli's Warbler complex, Phylloscopus bonelli and Phylloscopus orientalis, at ringing stations in the western Mediterranean Basin Gibraltar, and the eastern Eilat, Israel. Data on biometrics and passage dates of individuals trapped at Gibraltar and Eilat were used, and it was found that mean arrival date of Western Bonelli's Warblers at Gibraltar was 15 days later than Eastern Bonelli's Warblers at Eilat. Furthermore, Western Bonelli's Warblers had shorter wings than Eastern Bonelli's Warblers. On the other hand, birds in Eilat were in poorer body condition than individuals in Gibraltar. The comparison between geographically distant stop-over sites contributes to furthering our understanding of the development of migration strategies across ecological barriers in sibling species. Our study showed that populations that breed in southwestern Europe migrate through Gibraltar and winter in West Africa are able to accomplish migration in comparatively good body condition. This is in contrast to those that winter in East Africa, migrate through Israel and have to endure the combined challenge of crossing the Sahel, Sahara and Sinai deserts before reaching their breeding grounds across southeast Europe and southwest Asia. Hence, the discrepancies described between the western and the eastern flyway suggest that individuals in the west, in general, migrate shorter distances, have a physiologically less demanding crossing of the North African deserts and appear to stage before their crossing the Strait of Gibraltar, a privilege unavailable to the migrants of the eastern flyway.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean; Phylloscopus bonelli; Phylloscopus orientalis; geographical barrier; migration
Year: 2015 PMID: 26692801 PMCID: PMC4668909 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.530.5955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Figure 1.Migration phenology of Western Bonelli’s Warbler in Gibraltar (N = 1073; a) and Eastern (N = 1674; b) Bonelli’s Warbler in Eilat, Israel.
Mean values with 95% confidence of limits in parentheses, ranges and sample size for wing chord length, body mass and body condition index of Western and Eastern Bonelli’s Warbler recorded in Gibraltar and Eilat, Israel, respectively.
| Variable | Western Bonelli’s Warbler | Eastern Bonelli’s Warbler |
|---|---|---|
| wing chord length (mm) | 63.6 (63.4−63.8) range: 56−73, N = 1072 | 66.0 (65.9−66.2) range: 49−77, N = 1666 |
| body mass (g) | 7.2 (7.2−7.3) range: 4.8−10.5, N = 1025 | 7.0 (6.9−7.0) range: 4.6−11.0, N = 1646 |
| body condition index | 0.114 (0.113−0.115) range: 0.075−0.161, N = 1025 | 0.106 (0.105−0.106) range: 0.073−0.167, N = 1644 |