Connectivity between flyway populations of waterbirds: assessment of rates of exchange, their causes and consequences

Summary Conservation and management of migratory waterbirds use flyway populations as the basic unit, and knowledge of the delineation, rate of exchange and gene flow between populations is fundamental. However, for the majority of global flyway populations, information is too fragmentary to address...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Applied Ecology
Main Authors: Madsen, Jesper, Tjørnløv, Rune S., Frederiksen, Morten, Mitchell, Carl, Sigfússon, Arnór Th.
Other Authors: Pärt, Tomas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2013
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12183
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2F1365-2664.12183
https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/1365-2664.12183
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Summary:Summary Conservation and management of migratory waterbirds use flyway populations as the basic unit, and knowledge of the delineation, rate of exchange and gene flow between populations is fundamental. However, for the majority of global flyway populations, information is too fragmentary to address connectivity between populations and, hence, insufficient to inform management. We investigated the demographic connectivity between the eastern (breeding in Svalbard and wintering in Denmark, the Netherlands and Belgium) and western (breeding in Greenland or Iceland and wintering in Britain) flyway populations of pink‐footed geese Anser brachyrhynchus based on resightings of marked geese from both populations. Previous genetic analyses suggested a modest gene flow between the two populations. Capture–recapture analysis conservatively estimated that mean annual movement probabilities were low (eastern to western population: 0·071%, 95% CI = 0·033–0·15%; western to eastern: 0·076%, 95% CI = 0·031–0·18%). Movement probability from eastern to western flyway populations increased in years with high snow cover in the southernmost winter range in B elgium. Life histories of exchanged individuals from eastern to western (32 different individuals during 1988–2010) revealed that the majority entered B ritain via B elgium and the N etherlands during winter; some returned to the eastern population via B elgium and/or the N etherlands, others moved northwards in B ritain during the spring and appear to have migrated directly from B ritain (western population) to N orway (eastern population). None of the birds from the eastern population emigrated permanently, but some individuals turned up in B ritain in consecutive years. Out of nine individuals switching from western to eastern flyway populations, three returned to B ritain; the others were not subsequently resighted. An alternative winter strategy and spring flyway over B ritain to N orway is suggested, used by hundreds to thousands of eastern birds, particularly following ...