Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris)

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Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris). / Xia, Huan; Nilsson, Cecilia; Thorup, Kasper; Jia, Chenxi; Lei, Fumin.

In: Avian Research, Vol. 14, 100103, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Xia, H, Nilsson, C, Thorup, K, Jia, C & Lei, F 2023, 'Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris)', Avian Research, vol. 14, 100103. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avrs.2023.100103

APA

Xia, H., Nilsson, C., Thorup, K., Jia, C., & Lei, F. (2023). Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris). Avian Research, 14, [100103]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avrs.2023.100103

Vancouver

Xia H, Nilsson C, Thorup K, Jia C, Lei F. Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris). Avian Research. 2023;14. 100103. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avrs.2023.100103

Author

Xia, Huan ; Nilsson, Cecilia ; Thorup, Kasper ; Jia, Chenxi ; Lei, Fumin. / Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris). In: Avian Research. 2023 ; Vol. 14.

Bibtex

@article{28b7eb9b9837467aa79ff4b39aa5b3f5,
title = "Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris)",
abstract = "With the continued development of tracking technology and increasing interest in animal movement, our understanding of migration behavior has become more comprehensive. However, there are still many species that have not been well studied, particularly sea birds. Here, we present the first year-round Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking data of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris) at the population level. We used solar-powered GPS-Global System for Mobile communication (GSM) loggers to successfully track 30 individuals breeding at Xingrentuo Islet, Liaoning Province, China, for 1–3 years. Except for one individual who roamed in the far north of the Yellow Sea during non-breeding period, all others did a directed southward migration. Migration routes and wintering sites differed among migrating gulls and between years for the birds tracked for two or more years. Additionally, during wintering, the migrating gulls were more likely to travel over a large body of water and shift sites, and some trajectories were quite complex, which was probably closely related to what we observed in the field about their boat-chasing behavior. Compared to wintering movements, the post-breeding movements ranged over a smaller area. Specifically, almost all of them had a long post-breeding period near the breeding islet (≥120 days, <220 ​km from the breeding islet), and 80% of the gulls who were tracked more than one year had at least one faithful post-breeding site. Compared to the post-breeding period, only approximately half of the migrating gulls had a pre-breeding period that was shorter (3–20 days) and closer to the breeding islet (≤80 ​km). Migration distance varied among migrating gulls (range 209–2405 ​km) and the gulls moved least distance during post-breeding period. Furthermore, we found that the southward movement of the migrating gulls occurred when the temperature near the breeding islet dropped; specifically, the gulls directly migrated southward away from the post-breeding site. Our results suggest that the Black-tailed Gull has a long post-breeding period but a short pre-breeding period near the breeding islet and high diversity of their migrating patterns (in especial migration routes and wintering sites).",
keywords = "Black-tailed Gull, GPS tracking, Larus crassirostris, Migration, Post-breeding, Pre-breeding, Sea bird, Wintering",
author = "Huan Xia and Cecilia Nilsson and Kasper Thorup and Chenxi Jia and Fumin Lei",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.avrs.2023.100103",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "Avian Research",
issn = "2053-7166",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Non-breeding movements of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris)

AU - Xia, Huan

AU - Nilsson, Cecilia

AU - Thorup, Kasper

AU - Jia, Chenxi

AU - Lei, Fumin

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - With the continued development of tracking technology and increasing interest in animal movement, our understanding of migration behavior has become more comprehensive. However, there are still many species that have not been well studied, particularly sea birds. Here, we present the first year-round Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking data of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris) at the population level. We used solar-powered GPS-Global System for Mobile communication (GSM) loggers to successfully track 30 individuals breeding at Xingrentuo Islet, Liaoning Province, China, for 1–3 years. Except for one individual who roamed in the far north of the Yellow Sea during non-breeding period, all others did a directed southward migration. Migration routes and wintering sites differed among migrating gulls and between years for the birds tracked for two or more years. Additionally, during wintering, the migrating gulls were more likely to travel over a large body of water and shift sites, and some trajectories were quite complex, which was probably closely related to what we observed in the field about their boat-chasing behavior. Compared to wintering movements, the post-breeding movements ranged over a smaller area. Specifically, almost all of them had a long post-breeding period near the breeding islet (≥120 days, <220 ​km from the breeding islet), and 80% of the gulls who were tracked more than one year had at least one faithful post-breeding site. Compared to the post-breeding period, only approximately half of the migrating gulls had a pre-breeding period that was shorter (3–20 days) and closer to the breeding islet (≤80 ​km). Migration distance varied among migrating gulls (range 209–2405 ​km) and the gulls moved least distance during post-breeding period. Furthermore, we found that the southward movement of the migrating gulls occurred when the temperature near the breeding islet dropped; specifically, the gulls directly migrated southward away from the post-breeding site. Our results suggest that the Black-tailed Gull has a long post-breeding period but a short pre-breeding period near the breeding islet and high diversity of their migrating patterns (in especial migration routes and wintering sites).

AB - With the continued development of tracking technology and increasing interest in animal movement, our understanding of migration behavior has become more comprehensive. However, there are still many species that have not been well studied, particularly sea birds. Here, we present the first year-round Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking data of the Black-tailed Gull (Larus crassirostris) at the population level. We used solar-powered GPS-Global System for Mobile communication (GSM) loggers to successfully track 30 individuals breeding at Xingrentuo Islet, Liaoning Province, China, for 1–3 years. Except for one individual who roamed in the far north of the Yellow Sea during non-breeding period, all others did a directed southward migration. Migration routes and wintering sites differed among migrating gulls and between years for the birds tracked for two or more years. Additionally, during wintering, the migrating gulls were more likely to travel over a large body of water and shift sites, and some trajectories were quite complex, which was probably closely related to what we observed in the field about their boat-chasing behavior. Compared to wintering movements, the post-breeding movements ranged over a smaller area. Specifically, almost all of them had a long post-breeding period near the breeding islet (≥120 days, <220 ​km from the breeding islet), and 80% of the gulls who were tracked more than one year had at least one faithful post-breeding site. Compared to the post-breeding period, only approximately half of the migrating gulls had a pre-breeding period that was shorter (3–20 days) and closer to the breeding islet (≤80 ​km). Migration distance varied among migrating gulls (range 209–2405 ​km) and the gulls moved least distance during post-breeding period. Furthermore, we found that the southward movement of the migrating gulls occurred when the temperature near the breeding islet dropped; specifically, the gulls directly migrated southward away from the post-breeding site. Our results suggest that the Black-tailed Gull has a long post-breeding period but a short pre-breeding period near the breeding islet and high diversity of their migrating patterns (in especial migration routes and wintering sites).

KW - Black-tailed Gull

KW - GPS tracking

KW - Larus crassirostris

KW - Migration

KW - Post-breeding

KW - Pre-breeding

KW - Sea bird

KW - Wintering

U2 - 10.1016/j.avrs.2023.100103

DO - 10.1016/j.avrs.2023.100103

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85158839078

VL - 14

JO - Avian Research

JF - Avian Research

SN - 2053-7166

M1 - 100103

ER -

ID: 347299787