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1.
Summary Trans-Saharan insectivorous passerine night migrants stopping-over at a small oasis in Sinai were weighed as frequently as possible, throughout the entire length of fall and spring migration passages. Due to the small size of the oasis and the intensive trapping effort, most stopping-over birds were captured and weighed throughout a sizeable portion of their stopover period. Weights at first capture were either similar in both seasons, or greater in fall than in spring. In some species fall migrants that stayed one day were heavier than those staying longer. In other species, and for all species in spring, weights of birds that stayed one day did not differ from those staying longer. In most species the weight of birds that stayed for more than one day did not vary significantly between arrival and departure, and cases of weight gains were commoner in fall than in spring. Trends of weight changes of an individual during stopover were usually inconsistent, but the longer it stayed, more it gained (in fall), or less it lost (in spring). It is proposed that stopping-over birds do not always resume their migration only after their fat reserves have been replenished, but that their decision to take off, or the reappearance of the migration impulse, are also controlled by a time program incorporated into their endogenous migration scheme, which constantly updates the time left for sampling and refuelling. It seems that in spring less time is allotted for the whole migration program, hence the time constraint overrides then all other tactical considerations, such as the state of fat reserves, and the weather.  相似文献   

2.
D. J. Pearson 《Ibis》1971,113(2):173-185
Between March 1966 and May 1968 Palaearctic passerines were mist-netted in thick bush and lightly wooded savannah habitats near Kampala, on the northern shore of Lake Victoria. This paper reports weights of the seven principal species involved. Most migrants appeared to be in a lean condition during the winter months, when weights were relatively low and varied little in each species. Birds were not particularly light on arrival. In fact, autumn Garden Warblers Sylvia borin and Willow Warblers Phylloscopus trochilus were sometimes markedly heavy, and for the former species there was some evidence that the individuals concerned were passage migrants. Autumn weights of Swallows Hirundo rustica, Reed Warblers Acrocephalus scirpaceus and Yellow Wagtails Motacilla flava were similar to those recorded in winter. The mean weight of all species rose during late March or early April. Although most Garden Warblers and Willow Warblers trapped at the time of spring migration were within the normal winter weight range, many Acrocephalus warblers and the majority of Sand Martins Riparia riparia and Yellow Wagtails were rather heavy. Spring weights 40% or more above mean winter weight were not uncommon in the Sedge Warbler Acrocephalus schoenobaenus, but were recorded only occasionally in other species. Although most passerine migrants evidently left Kampala with substantial fat reserves, it was concluded that a considerable number of warblers departed at rather low weight. High spring weights were mainly confined to a period of two or three weeks in each of the warbler species. Locally wintering Acrocephalus warblers must have attained full premigratory weights within three weeks, and a number of spring retraps showed substantial gains at minimum mean rates of between 0–1 and 0–35 g per day. Most heavy Garden Warblers were probably on passage. Significant correlations between weight and wing-length were obtained for all species investigated, regressions of weight on wing-length being in the range 011-0-25 g/mm. Spring weights are briefly compared with data from Nigeria, and the northward migration of passerines from Lake Victoria is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Migrant species are commonly thought to be poor competitors in aggressive interactions with resident species. However, no studies have tested whether this relationship is widespread. Here, we compare the behavioural dominance of closely related species of migratory and nonmigratory birds, testing whether migrants are consistently subordinate to resident species in aggressive contests. We compiled published behavioural dominance data involving migrant and resident congeners, gathering additional data on the body mass and migratory distance of each species. Focal species included a diverse array of birds (28 taxonomic families, 12 orders) from around the world. We found that migrant species are usually subordinate to resident species, but that this relationship disappears at larger body sizes. For smaller birds (<500 g), resident species were behaviourally dominant in 83%–88% of comparisons; for larger birds (>500 g), resident species were dominant in only 25%–30% of comparisons. The relative difference in body mass best predicted dominance relationships among species, with larger species dominant in 80%–84% of comparisons. When migrant and resident masses were equal, however, resident species were still more likely to be dominant in smaller birds, suggesting that other factors may also contribute to the subordinate status of migrants. Overall, our results suggest that in smaller species, the evolution of migration is associated with lighter weights and other traits that compromise the competitive abilities of migrants relative to residents. In contrast, larger species appear able to evolve migration without compromising their size or competitive abilities in aggressive contests, suggesting size‐dependent constraints on the evolution of migration.  相似文献   

4.
Palaearctic waders were caught and weighed at Lake Nakuru in the Kenyan rift valley on 22 occasions in the non-breeding season between March 1967 and May 1969. The weights of four species are presented:Curlew Sandpiper, Little Stint, Ruff and Marsh Sandpiper.
Winter weights were relatively low and varied little. It is thought that waders had very little fat reserve at this time.
The mean weights of early autumn samples tended to be higher than corresponding mean winter weights, and autumn populations included some markedly heavy birds.
An increase in the mean weight, and a dramatic rise in the maximum weights of each species occurred shortly before its main spring departure time. The great majority of waders apparently gained considerable weight before migration from the area in April and May.
The spring migration of waders from Kenya is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A total of 1,794 migrating birds trapped at a coastal site in southern Sweden were sampled for detection of Campylobacter spp. All isolates phenotypically identified as Campylobacter jejuni and a subset of those identified as non-C. jejuni were identified to the species level by PCR-based techniques. C. jejuni was found in 5.0% of the birds, Campylobacter lari was found in 5.6%, and Campylobacter coli was found in 0.9%. An additional 10.7% of the tested birds were infected with hippurate hydrolysis-negative Campylobacter spp. that were not identified to the species level. The prevalence of Campylobacter spp. differed significantly between ecological guilds of birds. Shoreline-foraging birds feeding on invertebrates and opportunistic feeders were most commonly infected (76.8 and 50.0%, respectively). High prevalence was also shown in other ground-foraging guilds, i.e., ground-foraging invertebrate feeders (11.0%), ground-foraging insectivores (20.3%), and plant-eating species (18.8%). Almost no Campylobacter spp. were found in ground-foraging granivores (2.3%), arboreal insectivores (0.6%), aerial insectivores (0%), or reed- and herbaceous plant-foraging insectivores (3.5%). During the autumn migration, a high proportion of samples from juveniles were positive (7.1% in passerines, 55.0% in shorebirds), indicating transmission on the breeding grounds or during the early part of migration. Prevalence of Campylobacter spp. was associated with increasing body mass among passerine bird species. Furthermore, prevalence was higher in short-distance migrants wintering in Europe than in long-distance migrants wintering in Africa, the Middle East, or Asia. Among ground-foraging birds of the Muscicapidae, those of the subfamily Turdinae (i.e., Turdus spp.) showed a high prevalence of Campylobacter spp., while the organism was not isolated in any member of the subfamily Muscicapinae (i.e., Erithacus and Luscinia). The prevalence of Campylobacter infection in wild birds thus seems to be linked to various ecological and phylogenetic factors, with great variations in carriership between different taxa and guilds.  相似文献   

6.
Large numbers of passerine migrants cross the Sahara desert every year on their way to-and-from wintering areas in tropical Africa. In the desert, hardly any fuelling opportunities exist and most migrants have to prepare in advance. A central question is how inexperienced birds know where to fuel. Inexperienced garden warblers Sylvia borin were studied in Greece just before the desert crossing in autumn. Body mass data collected at two sites indicate that most birds do not fuel for the desert crossing further north. For the first time, detailed information about stopover duration close to the Sahara desert was studied by using light weight radio-transmitters. Results from Crete show that most first-year garden warblers arrive with relatively small fuel loads in relation to lean body mass (<30%), stay for 13–20 d and depart with an average fuel load of about 100%. Radio-tagged birds performed small scale movements initially and took advantage of fig fruits. Birds trapped at fig trees were heavier than birds trapped with tape lures, showing that tape lures can bias the sample of migrants trapped. The precise fuelling pattern found indicates that first-year migrants must also include external spatial cues to make the preparation for crossing the desert in the right area.  相似文献   

7.
Since 1969 remarkable numbers of night migrants have been attracted during misty conditions in November and December to three 1 kW floodlights at a game viewing lodge on the northeastern side of the Ngulia ridge, a small range of hills in the Tsavo National Park (West), southeast Kenya. The main species involved have been Palaearctic passerines, principally the Marsh Warbler Acrocephalus palustris, the Whitethroat Sylvia communis and the Sprosser Luscinia luscinia. Data were collected at the Lodge in the late autumns of 1969–71, and in particular between November 1972 and early January 1973, when over 2500 Palaearctic passerines were caught and ringed. Large falls have depended on mist or rain during the latter part of the night, at any time during the month except around full moon. Highest numbers have occurred in late November and the first half of December. In 1973 falls continued into the second week of January. Grounded birds move on quickly, extremely few having been retrapped. During 1972–73, the species prominent in falls at the Lodge were abundant as transit migrants in Tsavo only from mid-December to early or mid January, at which time retrap rates were highest. The high weights and considerable fat deposits of many birds caught suggested they were grounded some distance north of their destination. Forty-two migrants analysed had a mean lipid content of 12·9% of their live weight; none was appreciably dehydrated. In 1972–73, highest weights were found at the beginning and end of the season. Individual species are discussed, and in several cases their African status reviewed. Several species were encountered at Ngulia in numbers far larger than those previously reported from elsewhere in Africa. In 1972–73, for instance, over 1000 Marsh Warblers were caught and many thousands of others seen, hundreds of River Warblers Locustella fluviatilis occurred, and White-throated Robins Irania gutturalis, Basra Reed Warblers Acrocephalus griseldis, Rufous Bush Chats Cercotrichas galactotes and Olive-tree Warblers Hippolais olivetorum were caught regularly. Most of the Basra Reed Warblers, Upcher's Warblers Hippolais languida and Olivaceous Warblers H. pallida, and many of the Whitethroats (apparently all of the eastern race icterops) handled during late December and early January were in fresh plumage, although these species are not known to moult north of the Sahara. They are presumed to have renewed their plumage in northeast Africa earlier in the autumn. In many Basra Reed Warblers and Whitethroats moult was only partly completed; in almost all such cases it was arrested. Itinerancy south of the Sahara is discussed. It seems clearly established that a regular southward migration, in the usually accepted sense of the word, occurs across Tsavo, of Palaearctic species which have already been in tropical Africa up to three months. Most species involved in this migration cross the equator on a remarkably narrow front, and are rarely recorded in Kenya west of Nairobi.  相似文献   

8.
C. De  Lucca 《Ibis》1969,111(3):322-337
The present paper is based on data obtained during several years' observations and three recent surveys. Little has previously been published on migration through the Maltese Islands. The geographical, vegetational and climatic factors of the islands are discussed in so far as they affect the migrants. Visible migration is seen with anticyclonic weather and westerly winds. Birds are found grounded after night migration in cyclonic weather with southwesterly or easterly winds, much larger numbers and variety being seen with the latter. When there is a deterioration in the weather during the night, a large influx of birds is seen on the following morning, and in addition large flocks of migrating Turtle Doves are seen. Several trans-Saharan migrants may pass in smaller numbers during autumn than spring, but the difference may be more apparent than real because in early autumn the birds may depart after only a very short stay, and a few conspicuous species are absent or scarce. By contrast several species which winter north of the Sahara pass only or in much larger numbers during autumn, and these more than make up for those which are absent or rare. There is no evidence from bird ringing that in spring Malta regularly gets birds from Tunisia, at any rate from that part covered by the ringing stations (Cap Bon, Enfidaville, Gabes). The migrants which pass through Malta probably originate from an area in North Africa around Tripoli and some way westwards of it. During autumn the bulk of recoveries is from eastern European countries with a smaller percentage from northern and central Europe. Several species or groups of species are dealt with individually. In the discussion stress is laid on the very close relationship between migration and weather, especially the wind component. The comparatively small numbers of birds seen at Malta probably form part of a larger movement travelling on a broad front. It is argued that the large “falls” of migrants in bad weather result from drift acting on a mass passing mainly to one side or the other of the islands. Since much larger densities are seen with easterly than with westerly winds, it follows, if the hypothesis of drift be correct, that the numbers of birds travelling to the east of Malta are larger than those to the west of it. Moreover, since day migrants are seen with westerly winds and the bulk of night migrants with easterly ones, it is inferred that day migrants normally pass to the west, and the bulk of night migrants to the east, of the Maltese Islands. A parallel is drawn between the autumn migration and the performance of racing pigeons which are flown from the north and NE at this season.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The effect of body mass and fat reserves on the choice of the stopover place and on the stopover period was investigated in 3 species of passerine birds migrating through the Sahara in Egypt. Birds grounded in an oasis with food and water were more than 10% lighter than those from a desert stopover place which offered shade only. Stopover period was in general one day except for the light portion of oasis birds which stopped for up to three weeks during which they regained fat. A calculation of the maximum range which can be covered with the available fat depots revealed that nearly all birds from the desert stopover place should be able to cross the desert whereas about 60% of the oasis birds should not. An intermittant migratory strategy for the desert crossing is proposed with flight during the night and stopover during the day, even without drinking and feeding.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Length of stopover and rate of weight gain (fat deposition) were studied in several species of passerine birds that stopped in southwestern Louisiana along the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico after a trans-Gulf flight. Fatdepleted birds were more common among the birds that arrived at our study site in southwest Louisiana, though variability characterized our samples. Migrants that landed after encountering opposing winds or rain over the northern Gulf of Mexico were, on average, fatter than migrants that landed when weather was favorable for continued migration. Some of the variation in the energetic condition of arrivals may be explained by the location where migrants initiated crossings. Our simulation of flight over the Gulf of Mexico showed that with following winds a warbler can cross the Gulf of Mexico from Yucatan with fat reserves to spare, and stronger tailwinds make flights from as far south as Honduras energetically permissible. The length of stay after a trans-Gulf flight was related to the extent of fat-depletion upon arrival: lean birds stayed longer than fat migrants. Migrants stopped over for 1–7 days and replenished energy reserves at rates that varied from 0.19 g/d for Hooded Warblers (Wilsonia citrina) to 0.87 g/d for Ovenbirds (Seiurus aurocapillus). Within each species, most individuals gained weight at a rapid rate, though a few individuals lost or maintained weight during their stay.  相似文献   

11.
V. W. Smith B.Sc  M.R.C.V.S. 《Ibis》1966,108(4):492-512
During the winters 1963/64 and 1964/65 some 700 weights of 19 species of Palaearctic migrants caught in Central Nigeria were obtained. Where there were adequate weights for analysis, mean weights in the spring were significantly heavier than mean autumn weights; mean weight gains in the spring varied from 47% (Pied Flycatcher) to 21% (Garden Warbler and Spotted Flycatcher). Individual gains were higher.  相似文献   

12.
2003年7月~2006年5月对吉林莫莫格国家级自然保护区的鸟类进行了调查,并结合历史文献,确认保护区有鸟类298种,其中非雀形目鸟类172种,雀形目鸟类126种。该保护区的鸟类以旅鸟和夏候鸟为主,占保护区鸟类总数的84%(旅鸟52%、夏候鸟32%、留鸟11%、冬候鸟5%)。在128种繁殖鸟类中,古北界种类占73.44%,东洋界种类占6.25%,广布种占20.31%,可见古北界种类占优势。在保护区内记录到国家Ⅰ、Ⅱ级重点保护鸟类50种。  相似文献   

13.
The specific role of the glucocorticoid hormone corticosterone in regulating the migratory stages of flight and refueling in free-living migrants is as yet poorly studied, because these stages are difficult to identify in the field. Night-migrating songbirds provide an excellent model to investigate how corticosterone correlates with behavior and physiology because they fly during the night and rest and forage during the day. We measured baseline corticosterone and the adrenocortical response to restraint in 9 free-ranging songbird species: 3 night-migrating species, 3 day-migrating species, and 3 day-migrating irruptive species. Baseline corticosterone of night migrants was higher in birds caught out of nocturnal migration than in birds resting and foraging, and on the same level as in day migrants, suggesting that a rise in circulating corticosterone may facilitate the heightened metabolic processes of active flight, in particular protein breakdown. Stress-induced corticosterone levels increased in both actively flying birds and birds resting and foraging. The increase was highest in landing birds, which are possibly most sensitive to stress when arriving at an unfamiliar place. Migratory endurance flight is thus characterized by corticosterone concentrations that are lower than those associated with acute stressful and life-threatening episodes. In addition, the responsiveness to stress increased with decreasing fat score in a night-migrating species. Corticosterone approaches therefore stressful concentrations only when fat depots are nearly depleted, possibly to promote protein catabolism and to trigger a change in behavior, i.e., a switch to landing and searching for food.  相似文献   

14.
《Hormones and behavior》2010,57(5):548-556
The specific role of the glucocorticoid hormone corticosterone in regulating the migratory stages of flight and refueling in free-living migrants is as yet poorly studied, because these stages are difficult to identify in the field. Night-migrating songbirds provide an excellent model to investigate how corticosterone correlates with behavior and physiology because they fly during the night and rest and forage during the day. We measured baseline corticosterone and the adrenocortical response to restraint in 9 free-ranging songbird species: 3 night-migrating species, 3 day-migrating species, and 3 day-migrating irruptive species. Baseline corticosterone of night migrants was higher in birds caught out of nocturnal migration than in birds resting and foraging, and on the same level as in day migrants, suggesting that a rise in circulating corticosterone may facilitate the heightened metabolic processes of active flight, in particular protein breakdown. Stress-induced corticosterone levels increased in both actively flying birds and birds resting and foraging. The increase was highest in landing birds, which are possibly most sensitive to stress when arriving at an unfamiliar place. Migratory endurance flight is thus characterized by corticosterone concentrations that are lower than those associated with acute stressful and life-threatening episodes. In addition, the responsiveness to stress increased with decreasing fat score in a night-migrating species. Corticosterone approaches therefore stressful concentrations only when fat depots are nearly depleted, possibly to promote protein catabolism and to trigger a change in behavior, i.e., a switch to landing and searching for food.  相似文献   

15.
HUGH A. ROBERTSON 《Ibis》1988,130(2):261-267
Growth patterns of nestling Collared Doves Streptopetia decaocto , Woodpigeons Columba palumbus , Feral Pigeons C. livia and Stock Doves C. oenas , in Britain were compared. Open-nesting Collared Doves and Woodpigeons left the nest at about 60% of adult weight, hole-nesting Stock Doves at adult weight, and partial hole-nesting Feral Pigeons at an intermediate stage. Other species of pigeons and doves studied to date also fit this pattern. Stock Dove nestlings reared in nest-boxes reached heavier weights and left the nest later than those in more exposed sites. These results were correlated with differential predation pressure on open- versus hole-nesting birds.  相似文献   

16.
Lord  Medway 《Ibis》1970,112(2):184-198
Wintering Brown Shrikes frequent open lowland country, a habitat that is largely man-made in Malaya. Individuals are sedentary during the winter season, each occupying a restricted area and exhibiting territorial behaviour. The earliest observations each year in different parts of Southeast Asia indicate that the southward migratory journey is relatively rapid. In Malaya, migrants arrive from the first week of September to the third week of October. At a lowland netting station during 1964–68 a major part of the total catch was taken in the months of September and October. Only a small proportion of these early shrikes wintered in the netting area. No distant recoveries were reported, and the subsequent movements of birds that were not retrapped are unknown. Shrikes netted in September—October comprised 29% adults, 54% full grown (i.e. immatures plus poorly—characterized adults), and 17% juveniles. The mean wing-length was significantly longer among adults than among both other classes, which did not differ significantly. During the winter, all ages showed a progressive decline in wing-length until the flight feathers were renewed in a premigratory moult falling in February—early April. Moult recorded in four Brown Shrikes taken in October-November is interpreted as the completion of a post-nuptial moult, commenced on the breeding grounds before autumn migration. In April, after the premigratory moult, confirmed adults constituted 70% of the total trapped and apparent immatures 30%. The mean weight of September birds was lower than any other month except November. The low weight in November is partly correlated with the shorter mean wing-length of the sample; it may also reflect the seasonally unfavourable weather of this month. The mean weight in February was high, although all birds were moulting; the weather in this month is typically hot and dry. Highest weights were recorded in April, indicating the premigratory deposition of fat. Weights of birds trapped more than once at different intervals showed a small initial weight loss (2 g), followed by a recovery within four days and no long-term adverse effects. A comparison of September weights in Taiwan and Malaya provides a tentative basis for the calculation of fat reserves utilized on the migratory flight. The proportion of returns after one year was 11%, and after two years 1 % only. Most returning birds were present in the netting area during the latter part of the winter of initial ringing; it is suggested tentatively that imprinting of the wintering grounds may occur during this period. Ecologically in Malaya the Brown Shrike occupies a new habitat only gradually being filled by the resident Rufous-backed Shrike. There is no evidence of interaction between the two species.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Populations of avian transients were studied at a stopover area in southern Texas during four consecutive migration seasons, fall, 1973-spring, 1975. We captured individuals by mist net for banding and fat level determination. Concurrently we made observations on behavior of free-flying birds.We worked intensively with a single species, the Northern Waterthrush (Seiurus noveboracensis) while gathering weight fat and behavioral data on other species as well. Many of the patterns of weight change and behavior seen in the Northern Waterthrush were observed in other common passerines which occurred as transients on our study site.Results showed that birds in Zugstimmung and Zugdisposition differ, not only physiologically but behaviorally as well. Individuals of normally non-gregarious species that are in Zugstimmung are gregarious and stay in an area for only a short period. Their habitat needs are broad since these birds are not dependent on the food resources of the area in which they stop while in this physiological state. In contrast, normally non-gregarious migrants in Zugdisposition are hyperphagic and aggressively territorial in defense of resources and may stay at the same site for several days. Their habitat needs are quite specific since they must increase food intake by as much as 40% to build up fat reserves. Not all individuals in Zugdisposition are able to find territories at the same time. Those birds unable to claim territories either continue to migrate or stay in an area as floaters, continually attempting to obtain territories. Weather conditions probably act as a third variable that must be balanced by the individual in a complex optimization strategy with physiological state and success in competition.This paper is a Welder Wildlife Foundation Publication No. 197  相似文献   

18.
SPRING WEIGHTS OF SOME PALAEARCTIC MIGRANTS AT LAKE CHAD   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
C. H. Fry    J. S. Ash  I. J. Ferguson-Lees   《Ibis》1970,112(1):58-82
A visit was made to Malamfatori, on the western shore of Lake Chad, Nigeria, from 22 March to 13 April 1967, with the principal aim of studying Palaearctic migrants in relation to the environment. About 2,400 Palaearctic migrants of 29 species were mist-netted in beds of bulrush Typha australis and thickets of saltbush Salvadora persica. Some 300 of these were collected for fat analysis; the remainder were released after measurement and ringing, and provided 275 retraps during the course of the study. Data were supplemented by further netting by A. J. Hopson in late April and May. Yellow Wagtails Motacilla flava, Sedge Warblers Acrocephalus schoenobaenus and Whitethroats Sylvia communis were abundant and were studied in greater detail than other species. Yellow Wagtails fed almost exclusively on midges, particularly the abundant Tanytarsus spadiceonotatus. Sedge Warblers fed on small insects and spiders, and Whitethroats on Salvadora fruits. Sedge Warblers and some other chiefly insectivorous species turned to a diet including berries shortly before emigrating. Changes in weight during the course of the day were difficult to investigate, but were probably bimodal. Good correlations of weights with wing-lengths were obtained for species for which many data were available. Pre-migratory fattening did not occur synchronously in all populations of a species, but once it started in an individual it proceeded at a constant rate of 0.2 g/day in Sedge Warblers and 0.6 g/day in Whitethroats. Predation pressure probably ensured that individuals emigrated immediately they attained their maximum pre-migratory weight, although some Sedge Warblers and Whitethroats left the area before attaining maximum weight. Differences between the mean weight curves of first-caught and retrapped birds are discussed, and it is concluded that in some species there were both through-migrant and temporarily-resident populations at Malamfatori. The mean weights per day of Whitethroats, Sedge Warblers and also Reed Warblers A. scirpaceus were falling in late March, and slight changes in the weather, particularly temperature, may have been responsible. In mid-April there was a “rush” of lean Whitethroats, which are thought to have originated to the SW in Nigeria. Yellow Wagtails, Sedge Warblers and Whitethroats deposited up to 40% fat/live weight; Sand Martins Riparia riparia had up to 28%, and a small sample of Ruffs Philomachus pugnax up to 17%. In the case of Sedge Warblers, fat reserves were sufficient for crossing the Sahara both to the north and to the northeast. Contrary to the findings in some previous lipid studies, the fat-free dry weight and water content increased during fattening. The fat-free dry weight increase was about 34% in Yellow Wagtails, 18% in Sedge Warblers, and 35% in Whitethroats. The tissues involved in this increase were not investigated, but a study of Yellow Wagtails at Malamfatori in 1968 (in prep.) suggests that the pectoral muscles hypertrophy during fat deposition sufficiently to account for nearly all of the increase in fat-free dry weight and water fraction.  相似文献   

19.
ABSTRACT We describe the deleterious effects of using an antimony potassium tartrate emetic to obtain diet samples from birds, and compare information obtained from regurgitated samples versus fecal samples in describing diets of autumn migrants. We also examined dose effectiveness in captive Dark‐eyed Juncos (Junco hyemalis) subjected to the same emetic technique used in the field. Over 70% of migrants given an emetic at a study site in Idaho regurgitated useful samples. For 5 of 7 species analyzed, regurgitated samples produced significantly more arthropods per sample than fecal samples, and one species, Warbling Vireo, showed higher numbers of distinct arthropod taxa per sample. In most species, regurgitated samples accumulated arthropod taxa more quickly than fecal samples. However, increasing the number of fecal samples by 5–17 produced a similar number of taxa. Diet composition based on fecal versus regurgitated samples was generally similar, but there were significant differences. Two of 130 treated migrants died soon after treatment. Recapture frequency for treated birds was less than half that for untreated birds, but it is not clear whether this difference was due to treatment‐related mortality or emigration. Each treated bird that we recaptured had lost mass and this suggests a deleterious effect because untreated migrants tended to gain mass. In captivity, 18 Dark‐eyed Juncos were treated with emetic: 6 with the full mass‐specific recommended dose, 6 with half the recommended dose, and the final 6 with one quarter the recommended dose. All were alive 15–20 min posttreatment (recommended release time), but 17 of 18 died within 30 min after receiving the emetic. Together, our data suggest that although the emetic technique may be slightly more information‐rich in assessing diet, it is more harmful than previously reported especially in certain species and should be used only after adequate consideration of the immediate mortality and short‐term physiological effects on birds to be studied.  相似文献   

20.
R. E. Moreau  R. M. Dolp 《Ibis》1970,112(2):209-228
Data are presented for the fat and water contents of 410 specimens of 11 species of trans-Saharan migrants collected on the northwest coast of Egypt in autumn. Mean fat contents vary from 37% of lean dry weight in Hirundo rustica to 110% in Sylvia communis. There is also much variation in the range of fat contents within individual species, Muscicapa striata and Lanius collurio being exceptionally closely grouped and P. phoenicurus widely dispersed. The results for each species are discussed in relation to their migratory circumstances. On the basis that the birds concerned would have started to cross the eastern Mediterranean with at least 11/2 times as much fat as they contained on landing in Egypt, comparisons are made with data for spring migrants in western Africa and with American trans-Gulf migrants. Water contents, discussed as % of lean dry weight, show considerable variation within each species:the coefficient correlating this percentage with % fat is around 0.50 except in Lanius (0.98) and Oriolus (0.92). On investigating the relationship between wing-length and lean dry weight, we did not find a strong correlation in any of the species and caution in accepting conclusions to the contrary is indicated.  相似文献   

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