Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar

Jones W, Eberhart-Hertel LJ, Freckleton RP, Hoffman J, Krüger O, Sandercock BK, Vincze O, Zefania S, Szekely T (2021)
Journal of Avian Biology 2022(1).

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
Es wurden keine Dateien hochgeladen. Nur Publikationsnachweis!
Autor*in
Jones, William; Eberhart-Hertel, Luke J.; Freckleton, Robert P.; Hoffman, JosephUniBi ; Krüger, OliverUniBi; Sandercock, Brett K.; Vincze, Orsolya; Zefania, Sama; Szekely, Tamas
Abstract / Bemerkung
Adult survival is a key component of population dynamics, and understanding variation in and the drivers of adult survival rates and longevity is critical for ecological and evolutionary studies, as well as for conservation biology and practice. Tropical species of landbirds are often selected to have higher adult survival due to high nest predation rates, but it is unclear if the same patterns occur in other avian lineages with different life history strategies. Here, we investigate adult survival of three sympatrically breeding species of shorebirds in south-west Madagascar: the endemic and endangered Madagascar plover Charadrius thoracicus and two more widely distributed African species: the white-fronted plover C. marginatus and the Kittlitz's plover C. pecuarius. Using mark-recapture data from 1843 individuals breeding at an intensely monitored saltmarsh over a 13-year period, we estimated annual rates of apparent survival (phi) corrected for encounter probability. Adult apparent survival rates were high for all three species (mean +/- SE): Madagascar (phi = 0.899 +/- 0.010) and white-fronted plovers (phi = 0.923 +/- 0.008). Kittlitz's plovers showed a difference between the first (phi(1) = 0.719 +/- 0.026) and subsequent transitions (phi(2+) = 0.892 +/- 0.014), suggesting that transient breeders are common in this species. For birds first captured as adults, these survival estimates translate to life expectancies of 9.72 (+/- 1.11) years in Kittlitz's plovers, 9.36 (+/- 0.98) years in Madagascar plovers and 12.48 (+/- 1.32) in white-fronted plovers. We hypothesise that a long lifespan could be an adaptation arising from the unique climatic pressures on the island of Madagascar that would otherwise lead to reduced fitness. However, long lifespans may not sufficiently compensate for a reduction in breeding opportunities due to possible climatic disruption in the future. Consequently, at least two of these plover species seem vulnerable to ongoing habitat destruction and changing climate cycles.
Stichworte
demography; life history; lifespan; mark-recapture; shorebird
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Zeitschriftentitel
Journal of Avian Biology
Band
2022
Ausgabe
1
ISSN
0908-8857
eISSN
1600-048X
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2960452

Zitieren

Jones W, Eberhart-Hertel LJ, Freckleton RP, et al. Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar. Journal of Avian Biology . 2021;2022(1).
Jones, W., Eberhart-Hertel, L. J., Freckleton, R. P., Hoffman, J., Krüger, O., Sandercock, B. K., Vincze, O., et al. (2021). Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar. Journal of Avian Biology , 2022(1). https://doi.org/10.1111/jav.02911
Jones, William, Eberhart-Hertel, Luke J., Freckleton, Robert P., Hoffman, Joseph, Krüger, Oliver, Sandercock, Brett K., Vincze, Orsolya, Zefania, Sama, and Szekely, Tamas. 2021. “Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar”. Journal of Avian Biology 2022 (1).
Jones, W., Eberhart-Hertel, L. J., Freckleton, R. P., Hoffman, J., Krüger, O., Sandercock, B. K., Vincze, O., Zefania, S., and Szekely, T. (2021). Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar. Journal of Avian Biology 2022.
Jones, W., et al., 2021. Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar. Journal of Avian Biology , 2022(1).
W. Jones, et al., “Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar”, Journal of Avian Biology , vol. 2022, 2021.
Jones, W., Eberhart-Hertel, L.J., Freckleton, R.P., Hoffman, J., Krüger, O., Sandercock, B.K., Vincze, O., Zefania, S., Szekely, T.: Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar. Journal of Avian Biology . 2022, (2021).
Jones, William, Eberhart-Hertel, Luke J., Freckleton, Robert P., Hoffman, Joseph, Krüger, Oliver, Sandercock, Brett K., Vincze, Orsolya, Zefania, Sama, and Szekely, Tamas. “Exceptionally high apparent adult survival in three tropical species of plovers in Madagascar”. Journal of Avian Biology 2022.1 (2021).
Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Suchen in

Google Scholar