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Animal Migration

Animal Migration. What is migration?. Migration: Seasonal back and forth journeys between two sites Migrant vs. Resident. Which animals migrate?. Mammals Birds Amphibians Reptiles Fish Insects. Why do animals migrate?. Opportunism – exploitation of ephemeral/seasonal resources

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Animal Migration

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  1. Animal Migration

  2. What is migration? Migration: Seasonal back and forth journeys between two sites Migrant vs. Resident

  3. Which animals migrate? • Mammals • Birds • Amphibians • Reptiles • Fish • Insects

  4. Why do animals migrate? • Opportunism – exploitation of ephemeral/seasonal resources • Cost benefit ratio

  5. Types of Migration • Latitudinal • Altitudinal • Reproductive • Seasonal • Irruptive

  6. Types of Migration Obligate annual migration 1. Latitudinal (north-south) • Short distance (within a continent) • Some birds, bats, and whales • Long distance (between continents) • Many species of songbirds, shorebirds, waterfowl, hawks • Some bats and whales 2. Elevational • Movement up and down mountain slopes • Related to weather (especially snow depth) and food conditions • deer, elk, Mountain Goats, Spotted Owls, some songbirds

  7. How do animals migrate? • Magnetic field • Landmarks • Alignment of stars in night sky • Olfactory cues • Combination

  8. How do we know where animals go? • Direct observation • Ex. Broad-tailed hawk

  9. Photo by B. Webb

  10. Can estimate general population trends from number of migrating individuals counted Photo by B. Webb

  11. How do we know where animals go? • Capture, mark, recapture

  12. How do we know where animals go? • Radar, radio & satellite telemetry • Radar detection of neotropical migrant birds Trans Gulf-migrants leaving

  13. How do we know where animals go? • Radar, radio & satellite telemetry • Satellite telemetry Radio telemetry • Signal from transmitter to satellite • Location downloaded from satellite

  14. Peregrine Falcon migration routes based on satellite transmitter data

  15. Swainson’s Hawk migration routes based on satellite transmitter data

  16. How do we know where animals go? • Intrinsic markers • Stable isotopes • Elements vary in number of neutrons – C, N, H, O, S building blocks

  17. Bird Migration • Over 5 billion land birds of 187 species migrate between Europe and Asia to Africa • Over 5 billion land birds of over 200 species migrate between North America and the New World tropics • 75% of 650 bird species that nest in N. America migrate

  18. Neotropical migrant birds • 80% of breeding bird spp. in N. America • Complex annual life cycle • breeding areas (2-3 mths) • migratory pathways (2-3 mths) • wintering areas (6-7 mths) • Declines in many spp. • Pattern

  19. Neotropical Migrant Bird Conservation • Many species declining • Loss of multiple habitats: • Breeding • Migration stopover sites • Wintering 3 ranges used by the Blackpoll Warbler each year

  20. Neotropical Migrant Bird Conservation Loss and fragmentation of winter habitat (tropical forest): • slash and burn agriculture • pasture land for livestock production • commercial and illegal logging

  21. How declines have been measured • Breeding Bird Survey • species-specific studies • population estimates on breeding and wintering grounds Western meadowlark Painted bunting Cerulean warbler Population trends: 1996-2003

  22. Linkages between annual stages • American redstart • link condition on wintering grounds to breeding success • Stable isotope analyses: ratios of C13:C12 • High quality winter habitat (coastal mangroves and lowland forests): wetter and C13 depleted • Birds from high quality winter habitat • earlier on breeding grounds • earlier breeding = more chicks fledged

  23. 1.3 million wildebeest 350,000 Thompson’s gazelles 200,000 plains zebra

  24. Mammal migration: Serengenti

  25. Dangers: Serengeti migration • Predation • Land and water • Rinderpest • Human population growth • Land conversion • Poaching esp. resident animals

  26. Sea Turtle Migration • Juveniles hatch on shore and migrate to the open ocean • After years in the open sea, juvenile turtles move to specific coastal feeding grounds • Young loggerhead sea turtles in the North Atlantic cover more than 9,000 miles before returning to the North American coast! • Adult turtles migrate between specific feeding areas and then back to nesting beaches

  27. Juvenile Loggerhead Migration • Orientation during migration • A variety of navigational cues are used • Must stay in North Atlantic Gyre for several years to grow and develop • Detect subtle differences in the earth’s magnetic fields to use as navigational markers

  28. Adult Green Turtle Migration • Adult Green Turtles captured by fishermen at feeding grounds off coast of Nicaragua and branded • Some turtles escaped after boat capsized at FL Keys • Several months later same turtles recaptured in same area in Nicaragua • Turtles use a magnetic compass and have map sense

  29. Whale Migration • Pacific Gray Whales • Longest known migration for any mammal: 10,000-12,000 miles annually! • Raise calves in nurseries (lagoons) of Baja California • Migrate to feed in the cold arctic seas • Nearshore migration route allows for easy observation, but harassment by whale-watching boats may be pushing whales off shore

  30. Butterfly Migration • Monarch Butterflies • Fly up to 3,000 miles each way • Return to the same winter roosts, often to the exact same trees • Preferred conditions found in oyamel fir forests, which occur in a small area of mountain tops in central Mexico

  31. Conservation Strategies • International cooperation (Partners in Flight) • Incentives for developing countries to protect migratory wildlife and habitat • Public education: consumer choices

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