نتایج جستجو برای: wintering

تعداد نتایج: 2246  

2010
César Cestari

Foot-trembling is a foraging technique normally performed by plovers and lapwings. It exposes preys, and may increase the likelihood of capture. Currently, no detailed description of this technique is available for the Semipalmated Plover Charadrius semipalmatus. This article described the foot-trembling behavior during wintering of this species in southeastern Brazilian beaches.

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2005
David Grémillet Grégoire Kuntz Anthony J Woakes Caroline Gilbert Jean-Patrice Robin Yvon Le Maho Patrick J Butler

Warm-blooded diving animals wintering in polar regions are expected to show a high degree of morphological adaptation allowing efficient thermal insulation. In stark contrast to other marine mammals and seabirds living at high latitudes, Arctic great cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo have very limited thermal insulation because of their partly permeable plumage. They nonetheless winter in Greenlan...

2011
M. Convertino J. F. Donoghue M. L. Chu-Agor G. A. Kiker R. Munoz-Carpena R. A. Fischer I. Linkov

22 In this paper the realized niche of the Snowy Plover (Charadrius alexandrinus), a 23 primarily resident Florida shorebird, is described as a function of the scenopoetic and 24 bionomic variables at the nest-, landscape-, and regional-scale. We identified some pos25 sible geomorphological controls that influence nest-site selection and survival using data 26 collected along the Florida Gulf c...

2016
E. L. Carroll R. M. Fewster S. J. Childerhouse N. J. Patenaude L. Boren C. S. Baker Dan Weary

Juvenile survival and recruitment can be more sensitive to environmental, ecological and anthropogenic factors than adult survival, influencing population-level processes like recruitment and growth rate in long-lived, iteroparous species such as southern right whales. Conventionally, Southern right whales are individually identified using callosity patterns, which do not stabilise until 6-12 m...

2014
Kristina L. Paxton Emily B. Cohen Eben H. Paxton Zoltán Németh Frank R. Moore

Predicting how migratory animals respond to changing climatic conditions requires knowledge of how climatic events affect each phase of the annual cycle and how those effects carry-over to subsequent phases. We utilized a 17-year migration dataset to examine how El Niño-Southern Oscillation climatic events in geographically different regions of the Western hemisphere carry-over to impact the st...

2008
Nicola Saino Diego Rubolini Niclas Jonzén Torbjørn Ergon Alessandro Montemaggiori Nils Chr. Stenseth Fernando Spina

The long-term advance in the timing of bird spring migration in the Northern Hemisphere is associated with global climate change. The extent to which changes in bird phenology reflect responses to weather conditions in the wintering or breeding areas, or during migration, however, remains to be elucidated. We analyse the relationships between the timing of spring migration of 9 species of trans...

Journal: :PeerJ 2016
Chunrong Mi Huettmann Falk Yumin Guo

The rapidly changing climate makes humans realize that there is a critical need to incorporate climate change adaptation into conservation planning. Whether the wintering habitats of Great Bustards (Otis tarda dybowskii), a globally endangered migratory subspecies whose population is approximately 1,500-2,200 individuals in China, would be still suitable in a changing climate environment, and w...

Journal: :TheScientificWorldJournal 2002
Kim Withers

The Gulf Coast contains some of the most important shorebird habitats in North America. This area encompasses a diverse mixture of estuarine and barrier island habitats with varying amounts of freshwater swamps and marshes, bottomland hardwood forests, and coastal prairie that has been largely altered for rice and crawfish production, temporary ponds, and river floodplain habitat. For the purpo...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2014
D P L Toews A Brelsford D E Irwin

Differences in seasonal migratory behaviours are thought to be an important component of reproductive isolation in many organisms. Stable isotopes have been used with success in estimating the location and qualities of disjunct breeding and wintering areas. However, few studies have used isotopic data to estimate the movements of hybrid offspring in species that form hybrid zones. Here, we use ...

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2011
Benjamin Zuckerberg David N Bonter Wesley M Hochachka Walter D Koenig Arthur T DeGaetano Janis L Dickinson

1. Ecologists have long been interested in the role of climate in shaping species' ranges, and in recent years, this relationship has taken on greater significance because of the need for accurate predictions of the effects of climate change on wildlife populations. Bioclimatic relationships, however, are potentially complicated by various environmental factors operating at multiple spatial and...

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