Migration routes and timing of Mountain Plovers revealed by geolocators |
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Authors: | Allison K. Pierce Stephen J. Dinsmore Dennis Jorgensen Michael B. Wunder |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, Colorado, USA;2. Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA;3. World Wildlife Fund – U.S., Northern Great Plains Program, Bozeman, Montana, USA |
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Abstract: | Understanding the migratory movements and habitats used during the annual cycle of migrants is essential to developing comprehensive conservation strategies. Mountain Plovers (Charadrius montanus) are short‐distance migrants listed as a species of conservation concern in many states across their range, however, little is known about their migratory ecology. We used data from geolocators to describe the first direct estimates of migratory routes and migration schedules for Mountain Plovers breeding in Phillips County, Montana. We attached geolocators to 36 Mountain Plovers in 2010–2012 and recovered five (13.9%; three males and two females). Four of five Mountain Plovers in our study overwintered in Texas, and one overwintered in Arizona. Migration routes were relatively linear, with the exception of one plover that moved south and then west to reach its winter range in Arizona. Two plovers left breeding areas in mid‐July and the other three left in late September. All plovers used stopover sites near either eastern Colorado or southwest Kansas. Plovers that departed earlier used stopover sites for ~100 d, whereas those that left later used them for ~35 d. All plovers in our study arrived in wintering areas by early November and departed by late March. Our results suggest that eastern Colorado and southwest Kansas are important stopover areas during migration, and highlight the need to better understand how these locations support non‐breeding plovers. |
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Keywords: |
Charadrius montanus
geolocator light‐level archival tag migration phenology migration routes stopover |
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