
AbstractBackgroundMany birds species range over vast geographic regions and migrate seasonally between their breeding and overwintering sites. Deciding when to depart for migration is one of the most consequential life-history decisions an individual may make. However, it is still not fully understood which environmental cues are used to time the onset of migration and to what extent their relative importance differs across a range of migratory strategies. We focus on departure decisions of a songbird, the Eurasian blackbirdTurdus merula, in which selected Russian and Polish populations are full migrants which travel relatively long-distances, whereas Finnish and German populations exhibit partial migration with shorter migration distances.MethodsWe used telemetry data from the four populations (610 individuals) to determine which environmental cues individuals from each population use to initiate their autumn migration.ResultsWhen departing, individuals in all populations selected nights with high atmospheric pressure and minimal cloud cover. Fully migratory populations departed earlier in autumn, at longer day length, at higher ambient temperatures, and during nights with higher relative atmospheric pressure and more supportive winds than partial migrants; however, they did not depart in higher synchrony. Thus, while all studied populations used the same environmental cues, they used population-specific and locally tuned thresholds to determine the day of departure.ConclusionsOur data support the idea that migratory timing is controlled by general, species-wide mechanisms, but fine-tuned thresholds in response to local conditions.
FOOD AVAILABILITY, SPRING MIGRATION, 570, LONG-DISTANCE MIGRATION, FLIGHT, WEATHER, 330, NOCTURNAL PASSERINE MIGRANTS, QH301-705.5, Research, Control mechanisms, SEXUAL SELECTION, BIRD MIGRATION, Departure decision, Ecology, evolutionary biology, PHENOLOGY, ORIENTATION, Songbird migration, Environmental cues, Biology (General)
FOOD AVAILABILITY, SPRING MIGRATION, 570, LONG-DISTANCE MIGRATION, FLIGHT, WEATHER, 330, NOCTURNAL PASSERINE MIGRANTS, QH301-705.5, Research, Control mechanisms, SEXUAL SELECTION, BIRD MIGRATION, Departure decision, Ecology, evolutionary biology, PHENOLOGY, ORIENTATION, Songbird migration, Environmental cues, Biology (General)
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