ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa

Abstract Immature migrant waders have more complex patterns of primary moult than adults, but these have been described only fragmentarily. The Wood Sandpiper Tringa glareola breeds in the taiga region of the Palearctic and part of the population migrates to southern Africa. We selected this populat...

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Main Authors: Magdalena Remisiewicz, Anthony J. Tree
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
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Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.580.6463
http://www.kezk.bio.univ.gda.pl/admin/upload/files/mr_02.pdf
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.580.6463 2023-05-15T18:30:56+02:00 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa Magdalena Remisiewicz Anthony J. Tree The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.580.6463 http://www.kezk.bio.univ.gda.pl/admin/upload/files/mr_02.pdf en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.580.6463 http://www.kezk.bio.univ.gda.pl/admin/upload/files/mr_02.pdf Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. http://www.kezk.bio.univ.gda.pl/admin/upload/files/mr_02.pdf text ftciteseerx 2016-01-08T13:00:36Z Abstract Immature migrant waders have more complex patterns of primary moult than adults, but these have been described only fragmentarily. The Wood Sandpiper Tringa glareola breeds in the taiga region of the Palearctic and part of the population migrates to southern Africa. We selected this population for a study of the primary moult strategies of an immature wader. After analysing the moult formulae of 674 immatures, we discuss potential factors that influence the choice of moult strategy. All moulters replaced two to six outer primaries; 91 % moulted four or five. We used the Underhill–Zucchini model to estimate the timing and duration of moult in immatures replacing different numbers of primaries. A slow moult of five or six primaries, adopted by 29%, lasted on average 98–111 days, beginning on average 8–16 December. Moult of four primaries (63%) began on 6 January and averaged 73 days. A rapid moult of three primaries (7%) began on 24 January and averaged 55 days. All groups ended their moult between 19 and 28 March. GLM models showed that heavier immatures were more likely to start moulting than leaner birds. This tendency was more pronounced in November–January than in later months. The later the moult started, the fewer feathers were replaced and the faster the process. Departure time set the limit for the end of moult. We suggest the ability to choose different strat-egies allows immature Wood Sandpipers to adjust their moult to the variable conditions they encounter at wetlands in southern Africa. Text taiga Unknown
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description Abstract Immature migrant waders have more complex patterns of primary moult than adults, but these have been described only fragmentarily. The Wood Sandpiper Tringa glareola breeds in the taiga region of the Palearctic and part of the population migrates to southern Africa. We selected this population for a study of the primary moult strategies of an immature wader. After analysing the moult formulae of 674 immatures, we discuss potential factors that influence the choice of moult strategy. All moulters replaced two to six outer primaries; 91 % moulted four or five. We used the Underhill–Zucchini model to estimate the timing and duration of moult in immatures replacing different numbers of primaries. A slow moult of five or six primaries, adopted by 29%, lasted on average 98–111 days, beginning on average 8–16 December. Moult of four primaries (63%) began on 6 January and averaged 73 days. A rapid moult of three primaries (7%) began on 24 January and averaged 55 days. All groups ended their moult between 19 and 28 March. GLM models showed that heavier immatures were more likely to start moulting than leaner birds. This tendency was more pronounced in November–January than in later months. The later the moult started, the fewer feathers were replaced and the faster the process. Departure time set the limit for the end of moult. We suggest the ability to choose different strat-egies allows immature Wood Sandpipers to adjust their moult to the variable conditions they encounter at wetlands in southern Africa.
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
format Text
author Magdalena Remisiewicz
Anthony J. Tree
spellingShingle Magdalena Remisiewicz
Anthony J. Tree
ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa
author_facet Magdalena Remisiewicz
Anthony J. Tree
author_sort Magdalena Remisiewicz
title ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa
title_short ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa
title_full ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa
title_fullStr ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed ORIGINAL ARTICLE Rapid or slow moult? The choice of a primary moult strategy by immature Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola in southern Africa
title_sort original article rapid or slow moult? the choice of a primary moult strategy by immature wood sandpipers tringa glareola in southern africa
url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.580.6463
http://www.kezk.bio.univ.gda.pl/admin/upload/files/mr_02.pdf
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http://www.kezk.bio.univ.gda.pl/admin/upload/files/mr_02.pdf
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