| Literature DB >> 30733867 |
A Kölzsch1,2,3, G J D M Müskens4, P Szinai5,6, S Moonen7, P Glazov8, H Kruckenberg3, M Wikelski1,2, B A Nolet9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For the conservation and management of migratory species that strongly decrease or increase due to anthropological impacts, a clear delineation of populations and quantification of possible mixing (migratory connectivity) is crucial. Usually, population exchange in migratory species is only studied in breeding or wintering sites, but we considered the whole annual cycle in order to determine important stages and sites for population mixing in an Arctic migrant.Entities:
Keywords: Dynamic Brownian bridges; GPS tracking; Greater white-fronted goose; Long-distance moult migration; Migratory connectivity; Population exchange; Population overlap; Taimyr peninsula
Year: 2019 PMID: 30733867 PMCID: PMC6354378 DOI: 10.1186/s40462-019-0148-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mov Ecol ISSN: 2051-3933 Impact factor: 3.600
Tagging details and selected successful tracks of greater white-fronted geese
| Catch location | Year of catchb | Tag type | Tag weight | Tag manufacturer | Tag attachment | Number of successful tracks | Years of selected tracksc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kolguev Island | 2013 | solar GSM/GPS | 45 g | E-obs GmbH | backpack with Teflon harness | 4 ♀, 6 ♂ | 9 × 2014, 1 × 2015 |
| 2013 | solar UHF/GPS | 35 g | Univ. of Konstanz | integrated neckband | 1 ♀, 12 ♂ | 9 × 2014, 4 × 2015 | |
| 2016 | solar GPRS/GPS | 38 g | Madebytheo | integrated neckband | 7 ♀, 5 ♂ | 12 × 2017 | |
| Netherlands/ Northern Germanya | 2013/14 and 2014/15 | solar GSM/GPS | 45 g | E-obs GmbH | backpack with Teflon harness | 3 ♀, 4 ♂ | 3 × 2014, 4 × 2015 |
| 2015/16 and 2016/17 | solar GPRS/GPS | 38 g | Madebytheo | integrated neckband | 15 ♀, 24 ♂ | 3 × 2015, 21 × 2016, 15 × 2017 | |
| Hungary | 2012/13 | solar Argos/GPS | 45 g | Microwave Telemetry Inc. | backpack with Teflon harness | 5 ♂ | 5 × 2013 |
| 2015/16 and 2016/17 | solar GPRS/GPS | 38 g | Madebytheo | integrated neckband | 4 ♀, 1 ♂ | 1 × 2016, 4 × 2017 |
a in first two seasons in The Netherlands only
b summer or winter season
c selection criteria: no gaps > 48 h, 1 March – 15 November
Fig. 1GPS movement tracks of geese from the North Sea population (red lines) and Pannonic population (green lines) with dynamic Brownian bridge utilisation distribution cells of stopover, nest and moult sites (red cells for North Sea population, yellow cells for Pannonic population). Clockwise: (a) Spring migration tracks and stopovers, (b) nesting sites with tracks of 15 May – 15 July, (c) moulting sites with tracks of 1 July – 1 September and (d) autumn migration tracks and stopovers. Outlines are of overlap regions (see Fig. 2). Note that there is no overlap of nesting sites (North Sea population: Kolguev – Yamal; Pannonic population: Gydan and Taimyr). Tracks during moult (c) are not clearly separated by population
Fig. 2a Ringed and tagged greater white-fronted geese being released in Hungary 2016/17. Overlap regions (red cells) and GPS tracks (red for North Sea population, green for Pannonic population) towards and from those regions during (b) spring migration (North-Western Kazakhstan), (c) moult (Pyasina delta) and (d) autumn migration (Pyasina delta, Gydan peninsular, Bely island and Yamal). See outlines of those regions indicated in Fig. 1 a, c, d. Note that overlap regions in (b) are in the top-right and bottom-left corners of the map. GPS tracks are not clearly separated by population at this scale
Details of dynamic Brownian bridge utilisation distribution cells and population overlap
| North Sea population | Pannonic population | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total areaa | Overlap proportionb | Total areaa | Overlap proportionb | |
| Spring migration stopovers | 222,125 km2 | 0.05% | 55,025 km2 | 0.18% |
| Moult sites | 1741 km2 | 1.52% | 56,050 km2 | 16.15% |
| Autumn migration stopovers | 255,425 km2 | 0.84% | 164 km2 | 3.84% |
a total area of dynamic Brownian bridge utilisation distributions cells
b proportion of cells of each population that overlapped with the other population during spring migration, moult or autumn migration
Fig. 3Boxplot of times (in Julian Days, see 1st of each month indicated on the right) that tracked geese were stopping in each of the named overlap regions (red for North Sea population, yellow for Pannonic population). Vertical dashed lines separate spring migration, moult and autumn migration sites. Sample sizes (number of individuals) are indicated above. Small blue lines indicate days when geese were passing through the respective overlap region without stopping or moulting there, sample sizes are indicated below in blue
Durations (in days) spent in overlap regions by geese of each population
| North Sea population | Pannonic population | |
|---|---|---|
| West Kazakhstan | 19.8 | 6.8 |
| North Kazakhstan | 16.6 | 13.7 |
| West Pyasina | 21.8 (±12.7, N = 3) | 41.3 |
| Pyasina River | 35.8 (±2.0, N = 8) | 34.9 (±1.6, N = 2) |
| East Pyasina | 33.6 (±9.1, N = 4) | 40.8 |
| Pyasina autumn | 15.7 (±4.3, N = 8) | 13.8 (±7.1, N = 3) |
| Gydan | 17.3 (±4.7, N = 5) | 6.5 (±6.5, N = 2) |
| Bely Island/ North Yamal | 50.8 (±1.4, N = 2) | 21.0 |
| Central Yamal | 5.3 (±3.7, N = 3) | – |
Standard error and sample sizes (number of individuals in the region) indicated in brackets, if none are indicated sample size is N = 1 and therefore no standard error
Fig. 4GPS tracks of two adult male geese that switched from the North Sea population to the Pannonic population. Green marks stopover utilisation cells during spring migration, yellow marks cells during moult and red cells during autumn migration. a Tracks of goose NK3 are shown for 2015 (grey) and 2016 (cyan). It likely switched during moult in 2016. b Tracks of goose 424 are shown for 2016 (grey) and 2017 (cyan). It likely switched during spring migration or moult in 2016