Data from: Advancement in long-distance bird migration through individual plasticity in departure

Research summary: Globally, bird migration is occurring earlier, consistent with climate-related changes in breeding resources. Although often attributed to phenotypic plasticity, there is no clear demonstration of long-term population advancement in avian migration through individual plasticity. Us...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Conklin, Jesse R., Battley, Phil F.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5016732
https://zenodo.org/record/5016732
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Summary:Research summary: Globally, bird migration is occurring earlier, consistent with climate-related changes in breeding resources. Although often attributed to phenotypic plasticity, there is no clear demonstration of long-term population advancement in avian migration through individual plasticity. Using direct observations of bar-tailed godwits ( Limosa lapponica ) departing New Zealand on a 16,000-km journey to Alaska, we show that migration advanced by six days during 2008–2020, and that within-individual advancement was sufficient to explain this population-level change. However, in individuals tracked for the entire migration, earlier departure did not lead to earlier arrival or breeding in Alaska, due to prolonged stopovers in Asia. Moreover, changes in breeding-site phenology varied across Alaska, but were not reflected in within-population differences in advancement of migratory departure. We demonstrate that plastic responses can drive population-level changes in timing of long-distance migration, but also that behavioral and environmental constraints en route may yet limit adaptive responses to global change. The collection of long-term departure data was supported by Chris & Neville Hopkins, David & Lucile Packard Foundation, Dobberke Foundation for Comparative Psychology, Manawatu Estuary Trust, Marsden Fund (Royal Society of New Zealand), Massey University Doctoral Scholarship, New Zealand Department of Conservation, Ornithological Society of New Zealand, Pacific Shorebird Migration Project, Pūkorokoro Miranda Naturalist’s Trust, and Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts & Sciences.