Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks

Migration influences the ecology, evolution, and conservation of migratory animals (Webster et al. 2002), yet migration routes and timing between breeding and wintering areas is virtually unknown for American black ducks Anas rubripes. We used satellite telemetry to identify migration routes and sto...

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Main Author: Anderson, Kurt
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Delaware 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/12855
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spelling ftunivdelaware:oai:udspace.udel.edu:19716/12855 2023-06-11T04:14:37+02:00 Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks Anderson, Kurt 2013 application/pdf http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/12855 unknown University of Delaware http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/12855 Black duck -- Migration -- United States Thesis 2013 ftunivdelaware 2023-05-01T12:57:08Z Migration influences the ecology, evolution, and conservation of migratory animals (Webster et al. 2002), yet migration routes and timing between breeding and wintering areas is virtually unknown for American black ducks Anas rubripes. We used satellite telemetry to identify migration routes and stopovers, estimate migration chronology, and describe variation among black ducks marked between 2007–2009 in Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Virginia. A total of 31 transmitters provided at least one full data set during spring migrations. Black ducks departed wintering areas March 18–June 7 ( x̅ = April 17), averaged 3.35 stopovers (SE = 0.3 stopovers; range = 1–5 stopovers) and 6.44 d at stopovers (SE = 0.8 d; range = 0.54–12.2 d), migrated 1,126 km (SE = 89.5 km; range = 270–1,396 km), and arrived at inferred nesting areas April 16–June 28 ( x̅ = May 9). South Atlantic Flyway black ducks migrated almost twice as far and took nearly twice as many stopovers as Mississippi and North Atlantic Flyway black ducks; South and North Atlantic Flyway black ducks arrived at inferred nesting areas approximately 2 and 4 weeks after those from the Mississippi Flyway, respectively. Black ducks south of the 40th parallel migrated more than 50% farther, took nearly twice as many stopovers, and arrived at inferred nesting areas 2 weeks after those to the north. Black ducks east of the 76th meridian migrated nearly 25% farther and arrived at inferred nesting areas 3 weeks after those to the west. Nine black ducks spent all or portions of spring migration along the Atlantic Coast, and 10 used the Hudson and St. Lawrence River valleys. Stopovers included Long Island Sound, NY, Narragansett Bay, RI, Lake Champlain, VT, Merrymeeting Bay, ME, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada. All 11 black ducks wintering in Ohio stopped at Lake St. Clair, Saginaw Bay, St. Mary’s River, or the Georgian Bay. A total of 13 transmitters provided at least partial data during autumn migrations. Black ducks departed inferred nesting or molting areas ... Thesis North Atlantic The University of Delaware Library Institutional Repository Canada Hudson Lawrence River ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384) Long Island Long Island Sound ENVELOPE(-79.366,-79.366,54.800,54.800)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Delaware Library Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftunivdelaware
language unknown
topic Black duck -- Migration -- United States
spellingShingle Black duck -- Migration -- United States
Anderson, Kurt
Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks
topic_facet Black duck -- Migration -- United States
description Migration influences the ecology, evolution, and conservation of migratory animals (Webster et al. 2002), yet migration routes and timing between breeding and wintering areas is virtually unknown for American black ducks Anas rubripes. We used satellite telemetry to identify migration routes and stopovers, estimate migration chronology, and describe variation among black ducks marked between 2007–2009 in Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Virginia. A total of 31 transmitters provided at least one full data set during spring migrations. Black ducks departed wintering areas March 18–June 7 ( x̅ = April 17), averaged 3.35 stopovers (SE = 0.3 stopovers; range = 1–5 stopovers) and 6.44 d at stopovers (SE = 0.8 d; range = 0.54–12.2 d), migrated 1,126 km (SE = 89.5 km; range = 270–1,396 km), and arrived at inferred nesting areas April 16–June 28 ( x̅ = May 9). South Atlantic Flyway black ducks migrated almost twice as far and took nearly twice as many stopovers as Mississippi and North Atlantic Flyway black ducks; South and North Atlantic Flyway black ducks arrived at inferred nesting areas approximately 2 and 4 weeks after those from the Mississippi Flyway, respectively. Black ducks south of the 40th parallel migrated more than 50% farther, took nearly twice as many stopovers, and arrived at inferred nesting areas 2 weeks after those to the north. Black ducks east of the 76th meridian migrated nearly 25% farther and arrived at inferred nesting areas 3 weeks after those to the west. Nine black ducks spent all or portions of spring migration along the Atlantic Coast, and 10 used the Hudson and St. Lawrence River valleys. Stopovers included Long Island Sound, NY, Narragansett Bay, RI, Lake Champlain, VT, Merrymeeting Bay, ME, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada. All 11 black ducks wintering in Ohio stopped at Lake St. Clair, Saginaw Bay, St. Mary’s River, or the Georgian Bay. A total of 13 transmitters provided at least partial data during autumn migrations. Black ducks departed inferred nesting or molting areas ...
format Thesis
author Anderson, Kurt
author_facet Anderson, Kurt
author_sort Anderson, Kurt
title Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks
title_short Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks
title_full Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks
title_fullStr Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks
title_full_unstemmed Migration routes and chronology of American black ducks
title_sort migration routes and chronology of american black ducks
publisher University of Delaware
publishDate 2013
url http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/12855
long_lat ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384)
ENVELOPE(-79.366,-79.366,54.800,54.800)
geographic Canada
Hudson
Lawrence River
Long Island
Long Island Sound
geographic_facet Canada
Hudson
Lawrence River
Long Island
Long Island Sound
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/12855
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