Migration strategies of iberian breeding white-rumped swifts apus caffer, rufous-tailed scrub-robins cercotrichas galactotes and bluethroats Cyanecula svecica

Marta Lomas Vega*, Mikkel Willemoes, Juan Arizaga, Alejandro Onrubia, David Cuenca, Daniel Alonso, Carlos Torralvo, Anders P. Tøttrup, Kasper Thorup

*Corresponding author for this work
    1 Citation (Scopus)
    19 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    The migration strategies of smaller, south European, Mediterranean birds are less well known than those of northern and central European birds. We used geolocators to map individual spatiotemporal migration schedules of three species breeding in the Iberian Peninsula: The White-rumped Swift Apus caffer, rufous-tailed Scrub-robin Cercotrichas galactotes and Bluethroat Cyanecula svecica. The three species crossed the Sahara desert with a westward detour, to reach West African winter grounds in the Sahel (Bluethroats and Scrub-robins) or the rainforest belt (Swifts). Despite the proximity of the breeding grounds to the desert barrier, all but one individual stopped over before the desert crossing during autumn migration. After spending six months on average in sub-Saharan Africa with variable itinerancy, spring migration was faster overall and more direct than in autumn. Autumn migration was of similar duration to that found in related northern European migrants and therefore slower in southern birds. Spring migration was completed in less time than in the northern migrants (data only for Swifts and Scrub-robins). The shorter migration distance and proximity to the barrier potentially allow south European trans-Saharan migrants to migrate more slowly than northern migrants but only when less time-constrained in autumn.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalArdeola
    Volume66
    Issue number1
    Pages (from-to)51-64
    Number of pages14
    ISSN0570-7358
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2019

    Keywords

    • desert crossing
    • ecological barrier
    • geolocators
    • spatiotemporal schedule
    • stopover

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Migration strategies of iberian breeding white-rumped swifts apus caffer, rufous-tailed scrub-robins cercotrichas galactotes and bluethroats Cyanecula svecica'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this