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A Continent-Wide Migratory Divide in North American Breeding Barn Swallows (Hirundo rustica)
Authors:Keith A Hobson  Kevin J Kardynal  Steven L Van Wilgenburg  Gretchen Albrecht  Antonio Salvadori  Michael D Cadman  Felix Liechti  James W Fox
Institution:1Science and Technology Branch, Environment Canada, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada;2Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle, Washington, United States of America;317 Colborn St., Guelph, Ontario, Canada;4Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment Canada, Burlington, Ontario, Canada;5Swiss Ornithological Institute, Sempach, Switzerland;6Migrate Technology, Cambridge, United Kingdom;University of Regina, CANADA
Abstract:Populations of most North American aerial insectivores have undergone steep population declines over the past 40 years but the relative importance of factors operating on breeding, wintering, or stopover sites remains unknown. We used archival light-level geolocators to track the phenology, movements and winter locations of barn swallows (Hirdundo rustica; n = 27) from populations across North America to determine their migratory connectivity. We identified an east-west continental migratory divide for barn swallows with birds from western regions (Washington State, USA (n = 8) and Saskatchewan, Canada (n = 5)) traveling shorter distances to wintering areas ranging from Oregon to northern Colombia than eastern populations (Ontario (n = 3) and New Brunswick (n = 10), Canada) which wintered in South America south of the Amazon basin. A single swallow from a stable population in Alabama shared a similar migration route to eastern barn swallows but wintered farther north in northeast Brazil indicating a potential leap frog pattern migratory among eastern birds. Six of 9 (67%) birds from the two eastern populations and Alabama underwent a loop migration west of fall migration routes including around the Gulf of Mexico travelling a mean of 2,224 km and 722 km longer on spring migration, respectively. Longer migration distances, including the requirement to cross the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico and subsequent shorter sedentary wintering periods, may exacerbate declines for populations breeding in northeastern North America.
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