The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?

Seasonal migration is an important part of the annual cycle for migratory birds, and it is associated with large time and energy expenditures. One migration strategy used by many raptors and aerial foragers is fly-and-forage migration. Fly-and-forage migrants combine migratory flights with foraging...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tara L. Imlay, Sarah Saldanha, Philip D. Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2020-06-01
Series:Avian Conservation and Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ace-eco.org/vol15/iss1/art2/
id doaj-efcc9f3ffd7c4f45b04bafbcd67c0aca
record_format Article
spelling doaj-efcc9f3ffd7c4f45b04bafbcd67c0aca2020-11-25T03:17:31ZengResilience AllianceAvian Conservation and Ecology1712-65682020-06-0115121463The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?Tara L. Imlay0Sarah Saldanha1Philip D. Taylor2Department of Biology, Acadia University, Wolfville, NS, CanadaBiology Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaDepartment of Biology, Acadia University, Wolfville, NS, CanadaSeasonal migration is an important part of the annual cycle for migratory birds, and it is associated with large time and energy expenditures. One migration strategy used by many raptors and aerial foragers is fly-and-forage migration. Fly-and-forage migrants combine migratory flights with foraging to maximize travel speeds. We examine the fall migratory movements of a declining population of Bank Swallows Riparia riparia that breed in Atlantic Canada, and winter between northern Argentina and southern Brazil. We tagged breeding adults with small VHF transmitters in 2014, 2015, and 2018, and tracked them with the Motus Wildlife Tracking System. For each individual we determined a departure date (last detection at the breeding colony), a departure bearing, the broad-scale migratory pathway (east or west of the Adirondack Mountains), and the pace of the migratory journey. Bank Swallows departed from their breeding colonies throughout July and August and most individuals departed in a southwest to westerly direction, consistent with their subsequent migratory pathway along the Atlantic Coast. The pace of the migratory journey was slower than that observed for other migratory passerines, suggesting individuals used stopover sites during migration and/or foraged while migrating. Travel speeds were also slower for female, compared to male Bank Swallows, possibly because of sex-related differences in refueling and/or carry-over effects from the breeding season. Collectively, the results suggest that Bank Swallows use a fly-and-forage migration strategy, and fall migration movements are consistent with an energy-limiting strategy.http://www.ace-eco.org/vol15/iss1/art2/automated telemetryfly-and-forageoptimal migrationpostbreedingsand martin
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tara L. Imlay
Sarah Saldanha
Philip D. Taylor
spellingShingle Tara L. Imlay
Sarah Saldanha
Philip D. Taylor
The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
Avian Conservation and Ecology
automated telemetry
fly-and-forage
optimal migration
postbreeding
sand martin
author_facet Tara L. Imlay
Sarah Saldanha
Philip D. Taylor
author_sort Tara L. Imlay
title The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
title_short The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
title_full The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
title_fullStr The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
title_full_unstemmed The fall migratory movements of Bank Swallows, Riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
title_sort fall migratory movements of bank swallows, riparia riparia: fly-and-forage migration?
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Avian Conservation and Ecology
issn 1712-6568
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Seasonal migration is an important part of the annual cycle for migratory birds, and it is associated with large time and energy expenditures. One migration strategy used by many raptors and aerial foragers is fly-and-forage migration. Fly-and-forage migrants combine migratory flights with foraging to maximize travel speeds. We examine the fall migratory movements of a declining population of Bank Swallows Riparia riparia that breed in Atlantic Canada, and winter between northern Argentina and southern Brazil. We tagged breeding adults with small VHF transmitters in 2014, 2015, and 2018, and tracked them with the Motus Wildlife Tracking System. For each individual we determined a departure date (last detection at the breeding colony), a departure bearing, the broad-scale migratory pathway (east or west of the Adirondack Mountains), and the pace of the migratory journey. Bank Swallows departed from their breeding colonies throughout July and August and most individuals departed in a southwest to westerly direction, consistent with their subsequent migratory pathway along the Atlantic Coast. The pace of the migratory journey was slower than that observed for other migratory passerines, suggesting individuals used stopover sites during migration and/or foraged while migrating. Travel speeds were also slower for female, compared to male Bank Swallows, possibly because of sex-related differences in refueling and/or carry-over effects from the breeding season. Collectively, the results suggest that Bank Swallows use a fly-and-forage migration strategy, and fall migration movements are consistent with an energy-limiting strategy.
topic automated telemetry
fly-and-forage
optimal migration
postbreeding
sand martin
url http://www.ace-eco.org/vol15/iss1/art2/
work_keys_str_mv AT taralimlay thefallmigratorymovementsofbankswallowsripariaripariaflyandforagemigration
AT sarahsaldanha thefallmigratorymovementsofbankswallowsripariaripariaflyandforagemigration
AT philipdtaylor thefallmigratorymovementsofbankswallowsripariaripariaflyandforagemigration
AT taralimlay fallmigratorymovementsofbankswallowsripariaripariaflyandforagemigration
AT sarahsaldanha fallmigratorymovementsofbankswallowsripariaripariaflyandforagemigration
AT philipdtaylor fallmigratorymovementsofbankswallowsripariaripariaflyandforagemigration
_version_ 1724631766143074304