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Co-migration fidelity at a stopover site increases over time in African-European migratory landbirds. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Migratory species are adjusting their migration timing due to climate change, which affects food availability and fitness.
  • This study focuses on the co-migration patterns of African-European migratory landbirds, highlighting that they travel in species groups with significant overlap.
  • The concept of 'co-migration fidelity' is observed to be increasing, especially among long-distance migrants, indicating possible regulatory mechanisms that influence migration dynamics in response to climate conditions.

Article Abstract

Migratory species are changing their timing of departure from wintering areas and arrival to breeding sites (i.e. migration phenology) in response to climate change to exploit maximum food availability at higher latitudes and improve their fitness. Despite the impact of changing migration phenology at population and community level, the extent to which individual and species-specific response affects associations among co-migrating species has been seldom explored. By applying temporal co-occurrence network models on 15 years of standardized bird ringing data at a spring stopover site, we show that African-European migratory landbirds tend to migrate in well-defined groups of species with high temporal overlap. Such 'co-migration fidelity' significantly increased over the years and was higher in long-distance (trans-Saharan) than in short-distance (North African) migrants. Our findings suggest non-random patterns of associations in co-migrating species, possibly related to the existence of regulatory mechanisms associated with changing climate conditions and different uses of stopover sites, ultimately influencing the global economy of migration of landbirds in the Palearctic-African migration system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10465194PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.221043DOI Listing

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