Figure S1;Figure S2;Figure S3;Figure S4 from The interplay of wind and uplift facilitates over-water flight in facultative soaring birds

Species-specific variation in route selection. Posterior means and 95% credible intervals are shown for the species-level random effects (on the slopes) of the INLA model. ;Distribution of values over the used and available steps. These were used for building the step-selection functions. The top ro...

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Main Authors: Nourani, Elham, Bohrer, Gil, Becciu1, Paolo, Bierregaard, Richard O., Duriez, Olivier, Figuerola, Jordi, Gangoso, Laura, Giokas, Sinos, Higuchi, Hiroyoshi, Kassara, Christina, Kulikova, Olga, Lecomte, Nicolas, Monti, Flavio, Pokrovsky, Ivan, Sforzi, Andrea, Therrien, Jean-François, Tsiopelas, Nikos, Vansteelant, Wouter M. G., Viana, Duarte S., Yamaguchi, Noriyuki M., Wikelski, Martin, Safi, Kamran
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: The Royal Society 2021
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.15656577.v1
https://rs.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Figure_S1_Figure_S2_Figure_S3_Figure_S4_from_The_interplay_of_wind_and_uplift_facilitates_over-water_flight_in_facultative_soaring_birds/15656577/1
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Summary:Species-specific variation in route selection. Posterior means and 95% credible intervals are shown for the species-level random effects (on the slopes) of the INLA model. ;Distribution of values over the used and available steps. These were used for building the step-selection functions. The top row shows the instantaneous values and the bottom row the long-term variances. In the top row, it can be seen that wind support has more variability than delta-T and higher values of wind support are selected by the birds.;Bio-logging data for sea-crossing tracks annotated with wind support and delta-T. Data is pooled for sea-crossing segments during autumn migration of the Oriental honey buzzard (Pernis ptilorhynchus) and the grey-faced buzzard (Butastur indicus) in the East Asian flyways, the osprey (Pandion haliaetus) and the peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus), in both the African-Eurasian and the American flyways, and the Eleonora's falcon (Falco eleonorae) in the African-Eurasian flyway. For samples of complete tracks, see Fig. 2.;Wind support and delta-T values at the start of each sea-crossing track, grouped by time of day. Most species initiated sea-crossing with positive delta-T and wind support. An overview of wind support and delta-T along the sea-crossing tracks is presented in Fig. S3.