Moult migrant Tennessee Warblers undergo extensive stopover in peri-urban forests of southern Quebec release_7eofwyiulzfhhczdepslqrui6i

by Vanessa Poirier, Barbara Frei, Mathilde Lefvert, Ana Morales, Kyle Elliott

Published in Canadian Journal of Zoology by Canadian Science Publishing.

2024   Volume 102, Issue 3, p272-285

Abstract

Stopovers are the most energy- and time-consuming events during avian migration, yet individuals of certain species make long stopovers to moult ("moult migration"). Requiring abundant energy and a prolonged stay, moult migrants should occupy small stopover home ranges in resource-rich habitats. Understanding migrant behaviour at their stopovers is critical for implementing conservation efforts for declining Neotropical passerines. To examine the stopover timing and habitat use of one such moult migrating passerine, we radio-tagged 18 moulting and 4 post-moult Tennessee Warblers ( Leiothlypis peregrina (A. Wilson, 1811)) at an autumn stopover site. Although our data were biased towards one sampling year, moult migrants generally arrived at the stopover site earlier (average = 2 August) than post-moult migrants (average = 12 September). Moult migrants also stayed longer (46 ± 5 days) than post-moult migrants (8 ± 6 days) and had large overlapping stopover home ranges (∼15 ha) that were dependent on high abundance of forest (%) and forest edge (m). We conclude that Tennessee Warblers occupied forested stopover sites within a peri-urban landscape where they successfully moulted before continuing migration. This study illustrates the importance of including stopover sites in conservation plans, particularly in cities where quality habitats are scarce.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   1.8 MB
file_qbbf6uoa2bh2no3isqk4oubwou
cdnsciencepub.com (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2024-03-01
Language   en ?
Journal Metadata
Not in DOAJ
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  0008-4301
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: b79f9d77-5ae1-4d2e-9206-681c5ee090d5
API URL: JSON