| Literature DB >> 28005960 |
Marta Lomas Vega1, Mikkel Willemoes1, Robert L Thomson2,3, Jere Tolvanen4, Jarkko Rutila5, Peter Samaš6, Roine Strandberg7, Tomáš Grim6, Frode Fossøy8,9, Bård Gunnar Stokke8,9, Kasper Thorup1.
Abstract
Being an obligate parasite, juvenile common cuckoos Cuculus canorus are thought to reach their African wintering grounds from Palearctic breeding grounds without guidance from experienced conspecifics but this has not been documented. We used satellite tracking to study naïve migrating common cuckoos. Juvenile cuckoos left breeding sites in Finland moving slowly and less consistently directed than adult cuckoos. Migration of the juveniles (N = 5) was initiated later than adults (N = 20), was directed toward the southwest-significantly different from the initial southeast direction of adults-and included strikingly long Baltic Sea crossings (N = 3). After initial migration of juvenile cuckoos toward Poland, the migration direction changed and proceeded due south, directly toward the winter grounds, as revealed by a single tag transmitting until arrival in Northwest Angola where northern adult cuckoos regularly winter. Compared to adults, the juvenile travelled straighter and faster, potentially correcting for wind drift along the route. That both migration route and timing differed from adults indicates that juvenile cuckoos are able to reach proper wintering grounds independently, guided only by their innate migration programme.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28005960 PMCID: PMC5179092 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Autumn migration of common cuckoos.
Tracks of juveniles from Finland (red), northern adults (N adults; North Sweden and Finland; blue) and southern adults (S adults; Denmark and South Sweden; grey) with tagging and wintering sites (green and white triangles, respectively), and end of transmission (white circles) indicated. (A) Migration from breeding to wintering grounds and (B) details of initial movements with different red tinge for each juvenile cuckoo. Best quality locations for each duty cycle (dots) connected with lines. Horizontal lines at 55°N and 50°N indicate the band used to define entering and leaving, respectively, the NC Europe stopover. The line at 7°N defines leaving the Sahel. (C) Initial travel directions from breeding sites after moving 100 km and (D) travel directions (N and S adults; black) after leaving the Sahel. Each dot indicates the direction of one individual. Lines are group mean directions with 95% confidence interval. Data on North Swedish adults from [12] and Danish and South Swedish adults from [13].
Timing and duration of autumn migration in common cuckoos.
| Parameter | Sample size (adult/juvenile) | Adults | Juveniles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Departure from breeding site | 20/5 | 11 Jul (±11) | 26 Jul (±13) |
| Initiation of migration | 20/5 | 11 Jul (±12) | 14 Aug (±24) |
| Departure NC Europe stopover | 18/1 | 22 Aug (±16) | 20 Sep |
| Leaving Europe | 18/1 | 4 Sep (±14) | 29 Sep |
| Arrival Sahel | 16/1 | 14 Sep (±15) | 4 Oct |
| Arrival winter area | 16/1 | 18 Nov (±22) | 3 Dec |
| Migration duration | 16/1 | 131 (±22) | 134 |
| Days from NC Europe stopover to winter ground | 16/1 | 90 (±23) | 74 |
| Days from Sahel to winter ground | 16/1 | 64 (±25) | 60 |
Timing (mean date ± SD) and duration (days) of different stages during autumn migration of adult and juvenile cuckoos. NC = North Central. Data on North Swedish adults from [12] and Danish and South Swedish adults from [13].
Fig 2Timing of autumn migration in juvenile and adult common cuckoos.
(A) Latitudes traversed by Finnish juveniles (red), northern (blue) and southern adults (grey). Time is from the final part of breeding season until arrival on wintering grounds. (B) Mean difference between juveniles and adults in timing of migration, based on pair-wise inter-age-class differences, at different step latitudes during fall migration (error bars indicate standard deviations; numbers indicate sample size, adults/juveniles). Data on North Swedish adults from [12] and Danish and South Swedish adults from [13].