AVIS-IBIS

Birds of Indian Subcontinent

Numbers, migration phenology and survival of Purple Sandpipers Calidris maritima at Gourdon, eastern Scotland

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:2001
Authors:Summers, RW, Nicoll, M, Peach, W
Journal:Bird Study
Volume:48
Date Published:2001
ISBN Number:0006-3657
Keywords:Calidris, Calidris maritima, Canada, Ereunetes, Ereunetes maritimus, Erolia, Erolia maritima, Norway, Scolopacidae, Xenus, Xenus cinereus
Abstract:Purple Sandpipers wintering on the Kincardine coast had a protracted autumn arrival (one-quarter and three-quarters of the birds arrived on 30 July and 21 October respectively, 83 days) but a faster spring departure (one-quarter and three-quarters departed on 9 April and 27 May respectively, 48 days). The long arrival period was partly due to differences in the migration phenology of the two main wintering populations: short-billed birds from Norway arrived before the long-billed birds, probably from Canada. There was a smaller difference in departure times of the two populations: short-billed birds left before the long-billed birds. Minimum annual survival was estimated from resightings of 92 marked birds. There was no evidence that survival differed between adults and first-years or between birds of different bill-size classes, which were of different sex and geographical origin. Minimum annual survival was estimated to be 79.5%(se = 2.8%). The similarity between the mortality rate (20.5%) and the percentage of first-year birds in populations of Purple Sandpipers probably reflects balanced population dynamics.Purple Sandpipers wintering on the Kincardine coast had a protracted autumn arrival (one-quarter and three-quarters of the birds arrived on 30 July and 21 October respectively, 83 days) but a faster spring departure (one-quarter and three-quarters departed on 9 April and 27 May respectively, 48 days). The long arrival period was partly due to differences in the migration phenology of the two main wintering populations: short-billed birds from Norway arrived before the long-billed birds, probably from Canada. There was a smaller difference in departure times of the two populations: short-billed birds left before the long-billed birds. Minimum annual survival was estimated from resightings of 92 marked birds. There was no evidence that survival differed between adults and first-years or between birds of different bill-size classes, which were of different sex and geographical origin. Minimum annual survival was estimated to be 79.5%(se = 2.8%). The similarity between the mortality rate (20.5%) and the percentage of first-year birds in populations of Purple Sandpipers probably reflects balanced population dynamics.
URL:http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00063650109461212
Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith