4.3 Article

Satellite telemetry reveals long-distance migration in the Asian great bustard Otis tarda dybowskii

期刊

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY
卷 44, 期 4, 页码 311-320

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-048X.2013.00072.x

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资金

  1. Taimen Conservation Fund
  2. US National Security Education Program Boren Fellowship
  3. Wildlife Conservation Society Research Fellowship
  4. US National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. American Museum of Natural History's Chapman Fund
  6. Arizona State University's Graduate and Professional Student Association
  7. Cleveland Metroparks Zoo
  8. Rufford Small Grants Foundation

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The range of the great bustard stretches 10 000 km across Eurasia, one of the largest ranges of any threatened species. While movement patterns of the western subspecies of great bustard are relatively well-understood, this is the first research to monitor the movements of the more endangered Asian subspecies of great bustard through telemetry and to link a breeding population of Asian great bustards to their wintering grounds. Using Argos/GPS platform transmitter terminals, we identified the annual movement patterns of three female great bustards captured at their breeding sites in northern Mongolia. The 4000 km round-trip migration we have recorded terminated at wintering grounds in Shaanxi, China. This route is twice as long as has previously been reported for great bustards, which are among the heaviest flying birds. The journey was accomplished in approximately two months each way, at ground velocities of 48-98 km h(-1), and incorporated multiple and variable stopover sites. On their wintering grounds these birds moved itinerantly across relatively large home ranges. Our findings confirm that migratory behavior in this species varies longitudinally. This variation may be attributable to longitudinal gradients in seasonality and severity of winter across Eurasia. The distance and duration of the migratory route taken by great bustards breeding in Mongolia, the crossing of an international border, the incorporation of many stopovers, and the use of a large wintering territory present challenges to the conservation of the Asian subspecies of great bustard in this rapidly changing part of the world.

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