Seasonal and daily movement patterns of an alpine passerine suggest high flexibility in relation to environmental conditions
Data files
Sep 22, 2021 version files 110.70 MB
-
2cyM_data.rds
1.74 MB
-
2cyM_fittedmodel.rds
6.37 MB
-
2cyM_track.csv
24.23 KB
-
2cyM_twl.csv
45.45 KB
-
AdF_data.rds
2.14 MB
-
AdF_fittedmodel.rds
3.35 MB
-
AdF_track.csv
12.74 KB
-
AdF_twl.csv
56.70 KB
-
AdM-1_data.rds
1.79 MB
-
AdM-1_fittedmodel.rds
3.81 MB
-
AdM-1_track.csv
14.55 KB
-
AdM-1_twl.csv
47.07 KB
-
AdM-2_data.rds
1.78 MB
-
AdM-2_fittedmodel.rds
1.90 MB
-
AdM-2_track.csv
14.26 KB
-
AdM-2_twl.csv
46.57 KB
-
AdM-3_data.rds
1.33 MB
-
AdM-3_fittedmodel.rds
3.13 MB
-
AdM-3_track.csv
12.06 KB
-
AdM-3_twl.csv
34.82 KB
-
AdM-4_data.rds
460.98 KB
-
AdM-4_fittedmodel.rds
21.53 MB
-
AdM-4_track.csv
81.66 KB
-
AdM-4_twl.csv
38.84 KB
-
AdM-5_data.rds
515.32 KB
-
AdM-5_fittedmodel.rds
14.81 MB
-
AdM-5_track.csv
56.29 KB
-
AdM-5_twl.csv
43.26 KB
-
AdM-6_data.rds
477.93 KB
-
AdM-6_fittedmodel.rds
18.06 MB
-
AdM-6_track.csv
68.54 KB
-
AdM-6_twl.csv
40.42 KB
-
AdM-7_data.rds
516.47 KB
-
AdM-7_fittedmodel.rds
26.21 MB
-
AdM-7_track.csv
99.46 KB
-
AdM-7_twl.csv
43.66 KB
-
README.txt
831 B
Abstract
Mountains naturally offer variable habitat conditions, but their biodiversity is currently facing the extra challenge of adapting to rapid environmental shifts that are much more pronounced than in the lowlands. Among adaptive responses, intra- and inter-seasonal movements represent potentially important coping strategies for wildlife that remain largely unexplored. We investigated the seasonal and daily movements of the ring ouzel Turdus torquatus, a European mountain bird species that is declining in many parts of its distribution. We tracked individuals breeding in the Swiss Alps using light-level geolocators and multi-sensor loggers. Of the birds traced to their non-breeding grounds, two thirds reached the Atlas Mountains while one third stayed in Spain, a region potentially more significant for overwintering than previously thought. The birds remained mostly above 1000 m throughout the annual cycle, highlighting a strict association of ring ouzels with mountain habitats. We also evidenced flexible daily elevational movements, especially upon spring arrival on the breeding grounds in relation to date and snowfall occurrence, suggesting adaptive potential in response to environmental variation. This study shows how modern technology can deliver deeper and valuable insights into movements, behavioural patterns, and life-history strategies for relatively little-studied animal species. By doing so, it paves the way for refined assessments of species’ vulnerability to ongoing global change while providing basic conservation guidance.
Methods
Data from geolocators (GDL2 & GDL-uTag, Swiss Ornithological Institute) and multi-sensor loggers (GDL3-PAM, Swiss Ornithological Institute) fitted using leg-loop harnesses on Alpine Ring Ouzels (Turdus torquatus alpestris) breeding in the Swiss Alps.
There is both raw data (light intensity, pressure, acceleration, magnetism) and data on classified twilight events and estimated migratory tracks (coordinates with uncertainty and fitted models).
Usage notes
See README.txt file