Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris

Our ability to define the population status, migration routes and seasonal distribution of Bean Geese Anser fabalis throughout the annual cycle in East Asia is severely compromised by the presence of two subspecies (Eastern Taiga Bean Goose A. f. middendorffii and Eastern Tundra Bean Goose A. f. ser...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Li, Chang, Zhao, Qingshan, Solovyeva, Diana, Lameris, Thomas, Batbayar, Nyambayar, Bysykatova-Harmey, Inga, Li, Hansoo, Emelyanov, Vladimir, Rozenfeld, Sonia B., Park, Jinyoung, Shimada, Tetsuo, Koyama, Kazuo, Moriguchi, Sachiko, Hou, Jianhua, Natsagdorj, Tseveenmyadag, Kim, Hwajung, Davaasuren, Batmunkh, Damba, Iderbat, Liu, Guanhua, Hu, Binhua, Xu, Wenbin, Gao, Dali, Goroshko, Oleg, Antonov, Alexey, Prokopenko, Olga, Tsend, Otgonbayar, Stepanov, Alexander, Savchenko, Aleksandr, Danilov, Gleb, Germogenov, Nikolai, Zhang, Junjian, Deng, Xueqin, Cao, Lei, Fox, Anthony D.
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/44409
id ftchacadscircees:oai:/ir.rcees.ac.cn:311016/44409
record_format openpolar
spelling ftchacadscircees:oai:/ir.rcees.ac.cn:311016/44409 2023-06-11T04:03:38+02:00 Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris Li, Chang Zhao, Qingshan Solovyeva, Diana Lameris, Thomas Batbayar, Nyambayar Bysykatova-Harmey, Inga Li, Hansoo Emelyanov, Vladimir Rozenfeld, Sonia B. Park, Jinyoung Shimada, Tetsuo Koyama, Kazuo Moriguchi, Sachiko Hou, Jianhua Natsagdorj, Tseveenmyadag Kim, Hwajung Davaasuren, Batmunkh Damba, Iderbat Liu, Guanhua Hu, Binhua Xu, Wenbin Gao, Dali Goroshko, Oleg Antonov, Alexey Prokopenko, Olga Tsend, Otgonbayar Stepanov, Alexander Savchenko, Aleksandr Danilov, Gleb Germogenov, Nikolai Zhang, Junjian Deng, Xueqin Cao, Lei Fox, Anthony D. 2020-01 http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/44409 unknown WILDFOWL http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/44409 cn.org.cspace.api.content.CopyrightPolicy@2021b372 Bean Goose China distribution range East Asia Japan Korea migration flyway population trends 期刊论文 2020 ftchacadscircees 2023-05-28T12:15:29Z Our ability to define the population status, migration routes and seasonal distribution of Bean Geese Anser fabalis throughout the annual cycle in East Asia is severely compromised by the presence of two subspecies (Eastern Taiga Bean Goose A. f. middendorffii and Eastern Tundra Bean Goose A. f. serrirostris), which are difficult to differentiate in the field. In this analysis, using tracking data from telemetry-tagged geese, count survey data and expert knowledge, we attempt to update assessment of the ranges covered by both subspecies of Bean Goose in East Asia. We suggest that, in summer, the Eastern Tundra Bean Goose extends from the Taimyr Peninsula in the west to the Anadyr River in the east. Taiga Bean Geese breed further south in the taiga zone, and results indicate that they occur in north-western Mongolia, Yakutia and the Kamchatka Peninsula during the summer months. The winter distribution of both subspecies extends through China, Japan and South Korea. Tracking data from 154 individuals revealed a major overlap in the migration routes of Tundra Bean Geese wintering in China, South Korea and Japan, but discrete flyways for Taiga Bean Geese wintering in different regions. Long-term ground surveys carried out in the wintering range showed that numbers of Bean Geese in China and South Korea have increased significantly, to c. 253,100 and 88,300 individuals, respectively, of which roughly 10% are considered to be Taiga Bean Geese, about which subspecies we need to know more. Numbers of Japanese-wintering Bean Geese are increasing more slowly, with totals currently at c. 10,300 (c. 900 Tundra Bean Geese and c. 9,400 Taiga Bean Geese). On the basis of these national and flyway estimates, derived from counts over the last five years, we identify new key wintering sites for the species in East Asia. Distributional changes at sites in China showed that wintering Bean Geese (most likely of the Tundra form) have become more widespread and numerous in the Yangtze River floodplain since the early 2000s. We argue ... Report Anadyr Anadyr' Anser fabalis Kamchatka Kamchatka Peninsula taiga Taimyr Tundra Yakutia Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences: RCEES OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Anadyr ENVELOPE(177.510,177.510,64.734,64.734) Anadyr River ENVELOPE(177.924,177.924,64.489,64.489) Anadyr’ ENVELOPE(176.233,176.233,64.882,64.882) Kamchatka Peninsula ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,56.000,56.000)
institution Open Polar
collection Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences: RCEES OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
op_collection_id ftchacadscircees
language unknown
topic Bean Goose
China
distribution range
East Asia
Japan
Korea
migration flyway
population trends
spellingShingle Bean Goose
China
distribution range
East Asia
Japan
Korea
migration flyway
population trends
Li, Chang
Zhao, Qingshan
Solovyeva, Diana
Lameris, Thomas
Batbayar, Nyambayar
Bysykatova-Harmey, Inga
Li, Hansoo
Emelyanov, Vladimir
Rozenfeld, Sonia B.
Park, Jinyoung
Shimada, Tetsuo
Koyama, Kazuo
Moriguchi, Sachiko
Hou, Jianhua
Natsagdorj, Tseveenmyadag
Kim, Hwajung
Davaasuren, Batmunkh
Damba, Iderbat
Liu, Guanhua
Hu, Binhua
Xu, Wenbin
Gao, Dali
Goroshko, Oleg
Antonov, Alexey
Prokopenko, Olga
Tsend, Otgonbayar
Stepanov, Alexander
Savchenko, Aleksandr
Danilov, Gleb
Germogenov, Nikolai
Zhang, Junjian
Deng, Xueqin
Cao, Lei
Fox, Anthony D.
Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris
topic_facet Bean Goose
China
distribution range
East Asia
Japan
Korea
migration flyway
population trends
description Our ability to define the population status, migration routes and seasonal distribution of Bean Geese Anser fabalis throughout the annual cycle in East Asia is severely compromised by the presence of two subspecies (Eastern Taiga Bean Goose A. f. middendorffii and Eastern Tundra Bean Goose A. f. serrirostris), which are difficult to differentiate in the field. In this analysis, using tracking data from telemetry-tagged geese, count survey data and expert knowledge, we attempt to update assessment of the ranges covered by both subspecies of Bean Goose in East Asia. We suggest that, in summer, the Eastern Tundra Bean Goose extends from the Taimyr Peninsula in the west to the Anadyr River in the east. Taiga Bean Geese breed further south in the taiga zone, and results indicate that they occur in north-western Mongolia, Yakutia and the Kamchatka Peninsula during the summer months. The winter distribution of both subspecies extends through China, Japan and South Korea. Tracking data from 154 individuals revealed a major overlap in the migration routes of Tundra Bean Geese wintering in China, South Korea and Japan, but discrete flyways for Taiga Bean Geese wintering in different regions. Long-term ground surveys carried out in the wintering range showed that numbers of Bean Geese in China and South Korea have increased significantly, to c. 253,100 and 88,300 individuals, respectively, of which roughly 10% are considered to be Taiga Bean Geese, about which subspecies we need to know more. Numbers of Japanese-wintering Bean Geese are increasing more slowly, with totals currently at c. 10,300 (c. 900 Tundra Bean Geese and c. 9,400 Taiga Bean Geese). On the basis of these national and flyway estimates, derived from counts over the last five years, we identify new key wintering sites for the species in East Asia. Distributional changes at sites in China showed that wintering Bean Geese (most likely of the Tundra form) have become more widespread and numerous in the Yangtze River floodplain since the early 2000s. We argue ...
format Report
author Li, Chang
Zhao, Qingshan
Solovyeva, Diana
Lameris, Thomas
Batbayar, Nyambayar
Bysykatova-Harmey, Inga
Li, Hansoo
Emelyanov, Vladimir
Rozenfeld, Sonia B.
Park, Jinyoung
Shimada, Tetsuo
Koyama, Kazuo
Moriguchi, Sachiko
Hou, Jianhua
Natsagdorj, Tseveenmyadag
Kim, Hwajung
Davaasuren, Batmunkh
Damba, Iderbat
Liu, Guanhua
Hu, Binhua
Xu, Wenbin
Gao, Dali
Goroshko, Oleg
Antonov, Alexey
Prokopenko, Olga
Tsend, Otgonbayar
Stepanov, Alexander
Savchenko, Aleksandr
Danilov, Gleb
Germogenov, Nikolai
Zhang, Junjian
Deng, Xueqin
Cao, Lei
Fox, Anthony D.
author_facet Li, Chang
Zhao, Qingshan
Solovyeva, Diana
Lameris, Thomas
Batbayar, Nyambayar
Bysykatova-Harmey, Inga
Li, Hansoo
Emelyanov, Vladimir
Rozenfeld, Sonia B.
Park, Jinyoung
Shimada, Tetsuo
Koyama, Kazuo
Moriguchi, Sachiko
Hou, Jianhua
Natsagdorj, Tseveenmyadag
Kim, Hwajung
Davaasuren, Batmunkh
Damba, Iderbat
Liu, Guanhua
Hu, Binhua
Xu, Wenbin
Gao, Dali
Goroshko, Oleg
Antonov, Alexey
Prokopenko, Olga
Tsend, Otgonbayar
Stepanov, Alexander
Savchenko, Aleksandr
Danilov, Gleb
Germogenov, Nikolai
Zhang, Junjian
Deng, Xueqin
Cao, Lei
Fox, Anthony D.
author_sort Li, Chang
title Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris
title_short Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris
title_full Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris
title_fullStr Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris
title_full_unstemmed Population trends and migration routes of the East Asian Bean Goose Anser fabalis middendorffii and A. f. serrirostris
title_sort population trends and migration routes of the east asian bean goose anser fabalis middendorffii and a. f. serrirostris
publishDate 2020
url http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/44409
long_lat ENVELOPE(177.510,177.510,64.734,64.734)
ENVELOPE(177.924,177.924,64.489,64.489)
ENVELOPE(176.233,176.233,64.882,64.882)
ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,56.000,56.000)
geographic Anadyr
Anadyr River
Anadyr’
Kamchatka Peninsula
geographic_facet Anadyr
Anadyr River
Anadyr’
Kamchatka Peninsula
genre Anadyr
Anadyr'
Anser fabalis
Kamchatka
Kamchatka Peninsula
taiga
Taimyr
Tundra
Yakutia
genre_facet Anadyr
Anadyr'
Anser fabalis
Kamchatka
Kamchatka Peninsula
taiga
Taimyr
Tundra
Yakutia
op_relation WILDFOWL
http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/44409
op_rights cn.org.cspace.api.content.CopyrightPolicy@2021b372
_version_ 1768380792153571328