Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event

1. Extreme weather events have the potential to alter both short- and long-term population dynamics as well as community- and ecosystem-level function. Such events are rare and stochastic, making it difficult to fully document how organisms respond to them and predict the repercussions of similar ev...

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Main Authors: Senner, Nathan, Verhoeven, Mo, Abad-Gómez, Jose, Gutiérrez, Jorge, Hooijmeijer, Jos, Kentie, Rosemarie, Masero, Jose, Tibbitts, T., Piersma, Theunis, University of Konstanz
Other Authors: University Of Konstanz
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS) 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.91d70
https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.m3b75054
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author Senner, Nathan
Verhoeven, Mo
Abad-Gómez, Jose
Gutiérrez, Jorge
Hooijmeijer, Jos
Kentie, Rosemarie
Masero, Jose
Tibbitts, T.
Piersma, Theunis
University of Konstanz
author2 University Of Konstanz
author_facet Senner, Nathan
Verhoeven, Mo
Abad-Gómez, Jose
Gutiérrez, Jorge
Hooijmeijer, Jos
Kentie, Rosemarie
Masero, Jose
Tibbitts, T.
Piersma, Theunis
University of Konstanz
author_sort Senner, Nathan
collection Unknown
description 1. Extreme weather events have the potential to alter both short- and long-term population dynamics as well as community- and ecosystem-level function. Such events are rare and stochastic, making it difficult to fully document how organisms respond to them and predict the repercussions of similar events in the future. 2. To improve our understanding of the mechanisms by which short-term events can incur long-term consequences, we documented the behavioural responses and fitness consequences for a long-distance migratory bird, the continental black-tailed godwit Limosa limosa limosa, resulting from a spring snowstorm and three-week period of record low temperatures. 3. The event caused measurable responses at three spatial scales – continental, regional and local – including migratory delays (+19 days), reverse migrations (>90 km), elevated metabolic costs (+8·8% maintenance metabolic rate) and increased foraging rates (+37%). 4. There were few long-term fitness consequences, however, and subsequent breeding seasons instead witnessed high levels of reproductive success and little evidence of carry-over effects. 5. This suggests that populations with continued access to food, behavioural flexibility and time to dissipate the costs of the event can likely withstand the consequences of an extreme weather event. For populations constrained in one of these respects, though, extreme events may entail extreme ecological consequences. Yearly Black-tailed Godwit Return RatesThis data includes data on whether or not an individual godwit that was seen in one year, returned to their breeding grounds the following year. All data is categorized in reference to individual godwits (signified by their Colour Code). The initial year in which an individual was seen is not marked, only the following year is denoted with a 0 (not seen) or a 1 (seen). It also includes a column denoting each molecular individual's sex--0 (unknown), 1 (female), and 2 (male).Yearly Return Rates.xlsx2013 March-May Resightings of Black-tailed ...
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:50|dedup_wf_001::5b2d96bbf5f4d4ba1483b79f98287228 2025-01-17T01:24:59+00:00 Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event Senner, Nathan Verhoeven, Mo Abad-Gómez, Jose Gutiérrez, Jorge Hooijmeijer, Jos Kentie, Rosemarie Masero, Jose Tibbitts, T. Piersma, Theunis University of Konstanz University Of Konstanz 2021-07-18 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.91d70 https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.m3b75054 undefined unknown Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS) http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.91d70 https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.91d70 https://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.m3b75054 http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.m3b75054 lic_creative-commons oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:89204 10.5061/dryad.91d70 10.5441/001/1.m3b75054 oai:services.nod.dans.knaw.nl:Products/dans:oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:89204 10|re3data_____::84e123776089ce3c7a33db98d9cd15a8 10|openaire____::9e3be59865b2c1c335d32dae2fe7b254 10|re3data_____::94816e6421eeb072e7742ce6a9decc5f re3data_____::r3d100010469 10|re3data_____::361714fb0b743f80b37205cfa97e49be 10|eurocrisdris::fe4903425d9040f680d8610d9079ea14 re3data_____::r3d100000044 10|openaire____::081b82f96300b6a6e3d282bad31cb6e2 10|opendoar____::8b6dd7db9af49e67306feb59a8bdc52c Life sciences medicine and health care Carry-over effects stress response Limosa limosa limosa 2012-2014 Migration 2005-2014 resource availability behavioural flexibility animal movement Argos avian migration continental black-tailed godwits satellite telemetry The Netherlands envir geo Dataset https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_ddb1/ 2021 fttriple https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.91d70 https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.m3b75054 2023-01-22T17:22:27Z 1. Extreme weather events have the potential to alter both short- and long-term population dynamics as well as community- and ecosystem-level function. Such events are rare and stochastic, making it difficult to fully document how organisms respond to them and predict the repercussions of similar events in the future. 2. To improve our understanding of the mechanisms by which short-term events can incur long-term consequences, we documented the behavioural responses and fitness consequences for a long-distance migratory bird, the continental black-tailed godwit Limosa limosa limosa, resulting from a spring snowstorm and three-week period of record low temperatures. 3. The event caused measurable responses at three spatial scales – continental, regional and local – including migratory delays (+19 days), reverse migrations (>90 km), elevated metabolic costs (+8·8% maintenance metabolic rate) and increased foraging rates (+37%). 4. There were few long-term fitness consequences, however, and subsequent breeding seasons instead witnessed high levels of reproductive success and little evidence of carry-over effects. 5. This suggests that populations with continued access to food, behavioural flexibility and time to dissipate the costs of the event can likely withstand the consequences of an extreme weather event. For populations constrained in one of these respects, though, extreme events may entail extreme ecological consequences. Yearly Black-tailed Godwit Return RatesThis data includes data on whether or not an individual godwit that was seen in one year, returned to their breeding grounds the following year. All data is categorized in reference to individual godwits (signified by their Colour Code). The initial year in which an individual was seen is not marked, only the following year is denoted with a 0 (not seen) or a 1 (seen). It also includes a column denoting each molecular individual's sex--0 (unknown), 1 (female), and 2 (male).Yearly Return Rates.xlsx2013 March-May Resightings of Black-tailed ... Dataset black-tailed godwit Limosa limosa Siberia Unknown
spellingShingle Life sciences
medicine and health care
Carry-over effects
stress response
Limosa limosa limosa
2012-2014
Migration
2005-2014
resource availability
behavioural flexibility
animal movement
Argos
avian migration
continental black-tailed godwits
satellite telemetry
The Netherlands
envir
geo
Senner, Nathan
Verhoeven, Mo
Abad-Gómez, Jose
Gutiérrez, Jorge
Hooijmeijer, Jos
Kentie, Rosemarie
Masero, Jose
Tibbitts, T.
Piersma, Theunis
University of Konstanz
Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
title Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
title_full Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
title_fullStr Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
title_full_unstemmed Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
title_short Data from: When Siberia came to the Netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
title_sort data from: when siberia came to the netherlands: the response of continental black-tailed godwits to a rare spring weather event
topic Life sciences
medicine and health care
Carry-over effects
stress response
Limosa limosa limosa
2012-2014
Migration
2005-2014
resource availability
behavioural flexibility
animal movement
Argos
avian migration
continental black-tailed godwits
satellite telemetry
The Netherlands
envir
geo
topic_facet Life sciences
medicine and health care
Carry-over effects
stress response
Limosa limosa limosa
2012-2014
Migration
2005-2014
resource availability
behavioural flexibility
animal movement
Argos
avian migration
continental black-tailed godwits
satellite telemetry
The Netherlands
envir
geo
url https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.91d70
https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.m3b75054