Detoured flight direction responses along the southwest coast of Lake Erie by night-migrating birds
Autor: | David V. Gesicki, Erica L. Cech, Verner P. Bingman |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Flight direction biology Front (oceanography) Structural basin Nocturnal 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Passerine 010605 ornithology Current (stream) Geography Oceanography biology.animal Animal Science and Zoology Bay Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics |
Zdroj: | The Auk. 136 |
ISSN: | 1938-4254 0004-8038 |
Popis: | Migratory birds encounter the Great Lakes while moving through eastern North America toward breeding grounds to the North, which offers a good opportunity to study variation in migratory behavior as birds face a potentially influencing topographical feature. Using passive infrared technology, we documented the direction of relatively low-flying, nocturnal, mostly passerine migration in spring along the southern coast of Lake Erie’s western basin. We examined the extent to which spring migrants flew across Lake Erie as a continuation of the inland, northeasterly broad front migratory direction, as determined by weather radar and infrared observations, or displayed a tendency to deviate to more closely follow the direction of the coastline. We found that an estimated 62% of all low-flying migrants deviated their flight directions toward the coast of Lake Erie at 2 coastal sites, Cedar Point and Ottawa, which were characterized by northwest–southeast oriented coastlines. Migrants at a third coastal location, Maumee Bay, which has a more east–west oriented coastline, did not display similarly deviated flight directions. We found that even when winds were energetically favorable for a lake crossing, many migrants still routinely displayed deviated flight directions that approached paralleling the coastline. Further, the mean flight direction at one site, Ottawa, shifted more in the direction of the coastline as the night progressed, suggesting that time of night could influence the shift to a more coastal flight direction. The data indicate that the western basin of Lake Erie acts as a salient topographical feature influencing the flight directions of nocturnal migrants. The data further suggest that birds are making active decisions while in flight, based on current environmental and physiological conditions, about whether to continue to cross Lake Erie or take a coastal detour. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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