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Author Correction: Arctic avian predators synchronise their spring migration with the northern progression of snowmelt

Authors :
Teja Curk
David F. Brinker
Kurt K. Burnham
Stephen B. Lewis
Andrew Dixon
Jeff Kidd
Martin Wikelski
Vasiliy Sokolov
Ivan Pokrovsky
Kamran Safi
Ingar Jostein Øien
Scott Weidensaul
Tomas Aarvak
Andreas Dietz
Jean-François Therrien
Alastair Franke
Roar Solheim
Karl-Otto Jacobsen
Karen L. Wiebe
Nicolas Lecomte
Gilles Gauthier
Aleksandr Sokolov
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-2 (2020), Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

Migratory species display a range of migration patterns between irruptive (facultative) to regular (obligate), as a response to different predictability of resources. In the Arctic, snow directly influences resource availability. The causes and consequences of different migration patterns of migratory species as a response to the snow conditions remains however unexplored. Birds migrating to the Arctic are expected to follow the spring snowmelt to optimise their arrival time and select for snow-free areas to maximise prey encounter en-route. Based on large-scale movement data, we compared the migration patterns of three top predator species of the tundra in relation to the spatio-temporal dynamics of snow cover. The snowy owl, an irruptive migrant, the rough-legged buzzard, with an intermediary migration pattern, and the peregrine falcon as a regular migrant, all followed, as expected, the spring snowmelt during their migrations. However, the owl stayed ahead, the buzzard stayed on, and the falcon stayed behind the spatio-temporal peak in snowmelt. Although none of the species avoided snow-covered areas, they presumably used snow presence as a cue to time their arrival at their breeding grounds. We show the importance of environmental cues for species with different migration patterns.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2ffc96eeb61399cbfe5293f1f9bb0abf