Red-necked Phalarope southern Chukotka (data from Mu et al. 2018)-reference-data

Mu T, Tomkovich PS, Loktionov EY, Syroechkovskiy EE, Wilcove DS, Migratory routes of red-necked phalaropes Phalaropus lobatus breeding in southern Chukotka revealed by geolocators. Journal of Avian Biology e01853. doi:10.1111/jav.01853 : The migration routes of Red‐necked Phalaropes breeding around...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mu, Tong, Tomkovich, Pavel S., Loktionov, Egor Y., Syroechkovskiy, Evgeny E., Wilcove, David S.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Movebank Data Repository 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.p41784h5/3
https://www.datarepository.movebank.org/handle/10255/move.765
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Summary:Mu T, Tomkovich PS, Loktionov EY, Syroechkovskiy EE, Wilcove DS, Migratory routes of red-necked phalaropes Phalaropus lobatus breeding in southern Chukotka revealed by geolocators. Journal of Avian Biology e01853. doi:10.1111/jav.01853 : The migration routes of Red‐necked Phalaropes breeding around the Bering Sea are poorly known, despite the fact that the Bering Sea could mark the boundary between the East Palearctic populations that winter in the Pacific Ocean around the East Indies and the West Nearctic populations that winter in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of South America. Geolocator data retrieved from two male phalaropes tagged in southern Chukotka, Far Eastern Russia, confirm that birds breeding in this region belong to the East Palearctic population and winter in the East Indies, suggesting that the division line with the West Nearctic population is farther to the East. The routes taken by the two phalaropes were almost entirely pelagic, totaling around 18,000–20,000 km round‐trip, with the birds continuously on the move during migration, rather than resident in any particular stopover site, contrary to most other migratory shorebirds.