AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the vulnerability of three breeding populations of Swainson's Thrush in California by evaluating their migration patterns and forest loss impact.
  • Coastal birds from the San Francisco Bay area migrate to western Mexico, while inland populations have longer migration routes to destinations in Central and South America.
  • The inland populations are facing greater forest loss in their breeding and wintering areas, indicating a higher vulnerability that needs to be factored into conservation efforts.

Article Abstract

We compared the vulnerability of a Nearctic-Neotropical migrant (Swainson's Thrush, Catharus ustulatus) for three geographically-defined breeding populations in California by linking breeding and wintering regions, estimating migration distances, and quantifying relative forest loss. Using data from light-level geolocator and GPS tags, we found that breeding birds from the relatively robust coastal population in the San Francisco Bay area wintered predominantly in western Mexico (n = 18), whereas the far rarer breeding birds from two inland populations that occur near one another in the Sierra Nevada and southern Cascades mountain ranges migrated to farther wintering destinations, with birds from the Lassen region (n = 5) predominantly going to Central America and birds from the Tahoe region (n = 7) predominantly to South America. Landscape-level relative forest loss was greater in the breeding and wintering regions of the two Cascade-Sierra populations than those of coastal birds. Longer migration distances and greater exposure to recent forest loss suggest greater current vulnerability of Cascade-Sierra birds. Our results demonstrate that for some species, quantifying migration distances and destinations across relatively small distances among breeding populations (in this case, 140-250 km apart) can identify dramatically different vulnerabilities that need to be considered in conservation planning.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7099063PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-62132-6DOI Listing

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