Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies

In western Europe, farmland birds have declined in recent decades by almost 50% (BirdLife International 2004, EBCC 2009, PECBMS 2009. While declines are frequently associated with changed or changing conditions during the breeding season and deterioration of the breeding habitat In The Netherlands,...

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Main Authors: Arne Hegemann, Henk P Van Der Jeugd, Merlijn De Graaf, Lotte L Oostebrink, & B Irene Tieleman
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1047.5535
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.1047.5535 2023-05-15T13:10:03+02:00 Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies Arne Hegemann Henk P Van Der Jeugd Merlijn De Graaf Lotte L Oostebrink & B Irene Tieleman The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives 2010 application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1047.5535 en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1047.5535 Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. https://www.sovon.nl/sites/default/files/doc/veldleeuwerik_trekstrategie%20Nederland_Hegemann%20et%20al_Ardea%202010.pdf text 2010 ftciteseerx 2020-04-05T00:21:29Z In western Europe, farmland birds have declined in recent decades by almost 50% (BirdLife International 2004, EBCC 2009, PECBMS 2009. While declines are frequently associated with changed or changing conditions during the breeding season and deterioration of the breeding habitat In The Netherlands, the Skylark Alauda arvensis is one of the farmland species with the steepest decline: numbers dropped by almost 95% from around 700,000 Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies In recent years, Skylarks Alauda arvensis have undergone dramatic population declines in many European countries. Evidence exists for deteriorating conditions during the breeding season, but little is known about the situation during the rest of the annual cycle. Here we use two approaches to test if the Dutch breeding population of Skylarks consists of resident and/or migratory individuals. First, we present an analysis of ring recoveries from the Dutch Ringing Centre "Vogeltrekstation". Out of 25 recoveries, 12 Skylarks were resident in winter, 10 migrated and three were classified as probable migrants. Resident birds were accompanied during winter by birds from northern and eastern Europe. Very limited natal and breeding dispersal recorded in the same dataset suggests that our results were not influenced by long dispersal distances. Next, we compared these results to a local radio-telemetry study in the northern Netherlands. During two different years we equipped a total of 27 Skylarks from a breeding population with radio-transmitters and followed them during the subsequent winter. Four birds were found to winter locally. Out of 23 individuals that we did not find in winter, 14 returned in the following breeding season to the study area, all with a working transmitter, suggesting that they wintered outside our study area. Two ring recoveries of birds from the same study population indeed showed migration to south-west Europe. Based on these two ... Text Alauda arvensis Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftciteseerx
language English
description In western Europe, farmland birds have declined in recent decades by almost 50% (BirdLife International 2004, EBCC 2009, PECBMS 2009. While declines are frequently associated with changed or changing conditions during the breeding season and deterioration of the breeding habitat In The Netherlands, the Skylark Alauda arvensis is one of the farmland species with the steepest decline: numbers dropped by almost 95% from around 700,000 Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies In recent years, Skylarks Alauda arvensis have undergone dramatic population declines in many European countries. Evidence exists for deteriorating conditions during the breeding season, but little is known about the situation during the rest of the annual cycle. Here we use two approaches to test if the Dutch breeding population of Skylarks consists of resident and/or migratory individuals. First, we present an analysis of ring recoveries from the Dutch Ringing Centre "Vogeltrekstation". Out of 25 recoveries, 12 Skylarks were resident in winter, 10 migrated and three were classified as probable migrants. Resident birds were accompanied during winter by birds from northern and eastern Europe. Very limited natal and breeding dispersal recorded in the same dataset suggests that our results were not influenced by long dispersal distances. Next, we compared these results to a local radio-telemetry study in the northern Netherlands. During two different years we equipped a total of 27 Skylarks from a breeding population with radio-transmitters and followed them during the subsequent winter. Four birds were found to winter locally. Out of 23 individuals that we did not find in winter, 14 returned in the following breeding season to the study area, all with a working transmitter, suggesting that they wintered outside our study area. Two ring recoveries of birds from the same study population indeed showed migration to south-west Europe. Based on these two ...
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
format Text
author Arne Hegemann
Henk P Van Der Jeugd
Merlijn De Graaf
Lotte L Oostebrink
& B Irene Tieleman
spellingShingle Arne Hegemann
Henk P Van Der Jeugd
Merlijn De Graaf
Lotte L Oostebrink
& B Irene Tieleman
Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
author_facet Arne Hegemann
Henk P Van Der Jeugd
Merlijn De Graaf
Lotte L Oostebrink
& B Irene Tieleman
author_sort Arne Hegemann
title Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
title_short Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
title_full Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
title_fullStr Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
title_full_unstemmed Are Dutch Skylarks partial migrants? Ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
title_sort are dutch skylarks partial migrants? ring recovery data and radio-telemetry suggest local coexistence of contrasting migration strategies
publishDate 2010
url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1047.5535
genre Alauda arvensis
genre_facet Alauda arvensis
op_source https://www.sovon.nl/sites/default/files/doc/veldleeuwerik_trekstrategie%20Nederland_Hegemann%20et%20al_Ardea%202010.pdf
op_relation http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1047.5535
op_rights Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it.
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