Data from: The breeding distribution of a migratory bird fluctuates with nonbreeding season rainfall over the last century
Data files
Oct 20, 2025 version files 246.40 MB
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Ecoregions2017.dbf
1.03 MB
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Ecoregions2017.prj
257 B
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Ecoregions2017.shp
243.04 MB
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Ecoregions2017.shx
6.88 KB
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isodata_final.csv
69.67 KB
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isotopeanalysis-GCB.R
36.45 KB
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isotopedata_spatial.csv
38.77 KB
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nonbreeding.cpg
5 B
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nonbreeding.dbf
1.33 KB
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nonbreeding.prj
145 B
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nonbreeding.shp
2.17 MB
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nonbreeding.shx
148 B
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README.md
4.59 KB
Abstract
Species responses to climate change include shifts in distribution, abundance, and range limits. Predicting such shifts for migratory birds is inherently complex given the diversity of ways climate change can impact species throughout their annual cycles. For example, recent findings demonstrate that the breeding origin of a nonbreeding population of American Redstarts (Setophaga ruticilla) in Jamaica is shifting southward in response to prolonged drought on the nonbreeding grounds differentially causing lower survival in longer migrating individuals. Here, we examine how widespread this mechanism has operated over the past century and across the range of this species. We sampled tail feathers from redstart museum specimens and live birds from three time periods dating back to the turn of the 20th century from 5 regions across their nonbreeding range (Andean, Greater Antillean, Isthmian, Pacific Slope, and Yucatan) and used stable hydrogen isotopes to estimate changes in breeding origins. We used an ANCOVA to estimate the strength of the shift in mean breeding origin for each population of nonbreeding redstarts since the turn of the 20th century, and the role of nonbreeding season rainfall in driving observed shifts. Populations of redstarts on their tropical nonbreeding grounds experiencing a drying trend in rainfall showed a corresponding southward shift in their mean breeding origin (and vice versa) in subsequent years. The link between nonbreeding rainfall and mean breeding origin was most pronounced in the modern time period, where nonbreeding rainfall has decreased across most of the redstart nonbreeding range. Our findings illustrate how complex mechanistic drivers operate over space and time to help shape breeding range dynamics for a migratory bird, and emphasize how climate impacts species distributions throughout the annual cycle.
Dataset DOI: 10.5061/dryad.37pvmcvwr
Description of the data and file structure
See Methods section of associated manuscript entitled "The breeding distribution of a migratory bird fluctuates with nonbreeding season rainfall over the last century". Note that some data used were originally published in Studds et al. (2021) and Dossman et al. (2023), referenced below.
Files and variables
File: Ecoregions2017.dbf, Ecoregions2017.prj, Ecoregions2017.shp, Ecoregions2017.shx
Description: used to load shapefile of world ecoregions.
File: nonbreeding.cpg, nonbreeding.dbf, nonbreeding.prj, nonbreeding.shp, nonbreeding.shx
Description: used to load shapefile of American Redstart nonbreeding regions relevant to analysis originally derived from migratory connectivity estimates.
File: isotopeanalysis-GCB.R
Description: R script to reproduce entire analysis from Stevens et al. 2025.
File: isodata_final.csv
Description: stable hydrogen isotopic ratio data derived from American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla) tail feathers. Note that this a combination of new and existing data. Existing data come from Studds et al. (2021) and Dossman et al. (2023), referenced below.
Variables
- RowID: row of dataset
- Source: source of collected American Redstart
- ID: individual identifying number of American Redstart
- locality: geocoded locality where individual American Redstart was collected
- country: country where individual American Redstart was collected
- ECO_NAME: name of major ecoregion in which individual American Redstart was collected
- BIOME_NAME: name of major biome in which individual American Redstart was collected
- dD_bird: ratio of stable hydrogen isotopes present in the sampled tail feather of the individual American Redstart
- year: calendar year when individual American Redstart was collected
- sex: sex of individual sampled American Redstart
- geography: associated nonbreeding population of American Redstarts
File: isotopedata_spatial.csv
Description:
Variables
- RowID: row of dataset
- Source: source of collected American Redstart
- dD_bird: ratio of stable hydrogen isotopes present in the sampled tail feather of the individual American Redstart
- sex: sex of individual sampled American Redstart
- year: calendar year when individual American Redstart was collected
- country: country where individual American Redstart was collected
- locality: geocoded locality where individual American Redstart was collected
- Latitude: latitude of sample site
- Longitude: longitude of sample site
- ID: individual identifying number of American Redstart
Supplementary files hosted on Zenodo
File: amered_range_2021.gpkg
Description: shapefile of American Redstart breeding range derived from eBird. These data require a CC BY license and can be downloaded from eBird Science (https://science.ebird.org/en).
File: historic_rainfall.csv
Description: historic nonbreeding rainfall (January to March) dating back to 1900 downloaded from Copernicus Climate Change Service. These data require a CC BY license and be downloaded from the Copernicus Climate Change Service Climate Data Store (https://cds.climate.copernicus.eu/datasets).
Variables
- year: calendar year
- winter_rain: cumulative mean rainfall from January 1 to March 31
- group: associated nonbreeding population of American Redstarts
Code/software
These data are all used in the accompanying R script. All associated analyses with these data were conducted in R v. 4.4.0.
Access information
Other publicly accessible locations of the data:
- Some isotope data were originally published in other manuscripts:
- Dossman, B. C., Studds, C. E., LaDeau, S. L., Sillett, T. S., & Marra, P. P. (2023). The role of tropical rainfall in driving range dynamics for a long-distance migratory bird. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 120(52), e2301055120. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2301055120
- Studds, C. E., Wunderle, J. M., & Marra, P. P. (2021). Strong differences in migratory connectivity patterns among species of Neotropical‐Nearctic migratory birds revealed by combining stable isotopes and abundance in a Bayesian assignment analysis. Journal of Biogeography, 48(7), 1746–1757. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14111
