LINKING BREEDING AND WINTERING GROUNDS OF BICKNELL'S THRUSHES USING STABLE ISOTOPE ANALYSES OF FEATHERS
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Auk
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that natural abundance of deuterium (D), and to a lesser extent 13C, in feathers of migrant songbirds in North America can be used to infer geographic origins of molt. We used that approach to investigate whether Bicknell's Thrush (Catharus bicknelli) populations could be segregated on the breeding grounds at six sites in eastern North America to evaluate contributions from the breeding areas to wintering populations. Further, we tested our isotopic model using feathers from hatching-year migrant Swainson's Thrush (Catharus ustulatus) and Gray-cheeked Thrush (Catharus minimus) moving through southern Manitoba and Ontario and found that δD values were consistent with northerly boreal forest natal sites in northwestern and central Canada. Despite a strong latitudinal gradient in δD of average growing season precipitation over the breeding range, we found considerable overlap in δD values of Bicknell's Thrush among all breeding sites. No strong pattern in δ13C values of feathers with latitude was apparent. Nevertheless, the more negative δD values of feathers from wintering birds in the Dominican Republic compared to breeding area samples suggested that birds from more northerly locations in North America contributed to this population of wintering birds. High variance in feather δD values within breeding populations also suggested high natal dispersal, considerable movement of birds among island habitats on the breeding grounds, or both. Even higher variances in feather δD values from small study areas on the wintering grounds, compared to similar-sized areas in the breeding range, suggest that many different breeding populations mix in winter habitat.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stable isotopes (δD and δ 13 C) are geographic indicators of natal origins of monarch butterflies in eastern North AmericaOecologia, 1999
- The use of isotope tracers for identifying populations of migratory birdsOecologia, 1997
- Effects of climate on deer bone δ15N and δ13C: Lack of precipitation effects on δ15N for animals consuming low amounts of C4 plantsGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 1996
- Reproductive Success of Migratory Birds in Habitat Sources and SinksConservation Biology, 1995
- Singing Behavior, Song Types on Their Wintering Grounds and the Question of Leap-Frog Migration in Puget Sound White-Crowned SparrowsOrnithological Applications, 1995
- Determination of the hydrogen isotopic composition of bone collagen and correction for hydrogen exchangeGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 1994
- Molecular Population Structure and the Biogeographic History of a Regional Fauna: A Case History with Lessons for Conservation BiologyOikos, 1992
- Determination of the concentration and stable isotopic composition of nonexchangeable hydrogen in organic matterAnalytical Chemistry, 1991
- Oxygen isotope composition of the bone phosphate of Australian kangaroos: Potential as a palaeoenvironmental recorderGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 1990
- The Natal and Breeding Dispersal of BirdsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1982