Itinerant lifestyle and congregation of lesser kestrels in West Africa
Data files
Sep 12, 2023 version files 58.27 MB
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LK_fulldata_resampled.txt
58.20 MB
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Metadata_segmentation.csv
66.73 KB
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README.md
4.24 KB
Abstract
Trans-Saharan migrants often spend a large proportion of their annual cycle wintering in the Sahel. Advances in fieldwork and tracking technology have greatly enhanced our ability to study their ecology in these areas. Using GPS-tracking we aimed to investigate the little-known non-breeding movements of the lesser kestrel Falco naumanni in sub-Saharan Africa. We segment non-breeding tracks (n = 79 tracks by 54 individuals) into staging events (131± 25 days per non-breeding cycle), itinerant movements between staging sites (11 ± 10 days), and non-directed exploratory movements (6 ± 5 days). We then describe timing and directionality of itinerant movements by male and female kestrels throughout the non-breeding season. Regardless of sex, lesser kestrels spent on average 89% of the non-breeding season staging at 2 (range = 1–4) sites in West Africa. At the end of September, kestrels arrived along a broad front throughout the northern Sahel. By December, however, they congregated into two distinct clusters in Senegal and along the Malian-Mauritanian border. The birds stayed for longer periods and showed greater daily activity in the latter areas, compared to their first and intermediate ones. Among 24 individuals tracked along multiple annual cycles, 20 individuals consistently used the Senegalese or Malian-Mauritanian cluster. The remaining four birds used these clusters only after 2-3 years of tracking or switched between clusters across years. The eastward and westward itinerant movements of lesser kestrels during the non-breeding season, coupled with their tendency to cluster geographically towards the end, differ from the southward movements of other insectivorous raptors in West Africa. While 31% of Spanish lesser kestrels converged in Senegal, where roosts of > 20,000 birds are known, 68% moved into the Malian-Mauritanian border region where more groundwork is needed.
- File name: README.md
- Authors: Lina Lopez-Ricaurte
- Other contributors: Wouter M.G. Vansteelant, Jesús Hernández-Pliego, Daniel García-Silveira, Susana Casado, Fernando Garcés-Toledano, Juan Martínez-Dalmau, Alfredo Ortega, Beatriz Rodríguez-Moreno, Javier Bustamante
- Date created: 2023-09-06
Accompanying Paper and Data
- Paper Title: “Itinerant lifestyle and congregation of lesser kestrels in West Africa”
- Paper identifier: 10.1111/jav.03063
- Dataset Title: Data for: Itinerant lifestyle and congregation of lesser kestrels in West Africa
- Persistent Identifier: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.qjq2bvqnh
- Creators: Lina Lopez-Ricaurte
- Dataset Contributors: Wouter M.G. Vansteelant, Jesús Hernández-Pliego, Daniel García-Silveira, Susana Casado, Fernando Garcés-Toledano, Juan Martínez-Dalmau, Alfredo Ortega, Beatriz Rodríguez-Moreno, Javier Bustamante
- Date of Issue: 2023-09-05
Methodological Information
- Methods of data collection/generation: see manuscript for details- - -Description of the data and file structure
Pre-processed tracking data and metadata on Dryad
Details for: LK_fulldata_resampled.txt
Description: a text file containing the tracking data (complete annual cycle) of 54 lesser kestrels tagged at 28 breeding sites across Spain.
Format(s): .txt
Size(s): 39.269 KB
- ID: identifier device
- date: date
- indday: identifiers for unique bird days, composed of columns ID and a day number with 0000 = 1 Sept
- trip: identifier of unique trips, composed from columns ID, year and months. s1 (Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May) and s2 (Jun, Jul, Aug, Sept, Oct, Nov,Dic)
- date_time: timestamp in UTC
- LON: longitude in decimal degrees, WGS84
- LAT: latitude in decimal degrees, WGS84
- month: month
- year: year
- yday: day of year (0-365)
- sex:sex (f=female, m= male)
- POP: name of the country in which the bird was tagged (in our case -Spain)
- daynight: day and night locations
- cycle: a factor indicating the season to which the data belongs, such as summer, autumn migration, winter, or spring migration, for a specific year.
- type2: a factor showing the segmentation of the track in different stages: breeding, migration, winter, winter.exploratory
- type: a factor indicating the segmentation of the track into various stages: breeding, migration, winter.first, winter.transit, winter.inter.first, winter.exploratory, winter.inter.second, winter.last, winter.inter.third, winter.inter.fourth, winter.inter.fifth, winter.exploratory.outlier (i.e. long trip of up to 100 km north to West Sahara, followed by a return to Kaolack)
- colony: represents 20 distinct colonies located within Spain. See Supporting information S1 for details.
Details for: Metadata_segmentation.csv
- Description: a comma-delimited file containing the full individual metadata of lesser kestrels to segment tracks into different stages.
- Format(s): .csv
- Size(s): 67 KB
- Variables:
- ID: identifier of the device
- cycle: a factor indicating the season to which the data belongs, such as summer, autumn migration, winter, or spring migration, for a specific year.
- date: date format dd/mm/yyyy
- type: a factor indicating the segmentation of the track into various stages: breeding, migration, winter.first, winter.transit, winter.inter.first, winter.exploratory, winter.inter.second, winter.last, winter.inter.third, winter.inter.fourth, winter.inter.fifth, winter.exploratory.outlier (i.e. long trip of up to 100 km north to West Sahara, followed by a return to Kaolack)
- colony: represents 20 distinct colonies located within Spain. See Supporting information S1 for details.
- logger_type: the type of biologger: GPSminidatalogger, PathTrack
Third-party data
Links to other publicly accessible third-party data
- country borders via: https://www.naturalearthdata.com/downloads/50m-cultural-vectors/
- the main inland water (e.g. rivers and deltas) present in Senegal, Gambia, Mauritania and Mali via: (Source: Digital Chart of the World, Danko 1992) via https://www.diva-gis.org/
- topography: alt_30s_bil via https://geodata.ucdavis.edu/climate/worldclim/1_4/grid/cur/
Fieldwork was conducted in Spain during the breeding seasons of 2016–2020. A total of 216 adults were captured near the colony using balchatri or mist nets. They were also captured within the nest (such as nestboxes or other cavities) before egg laying, at the end of the incubation period or during the chick-rearing phase. We used two models of solar GPS-UHF biologgers from different manufacturers (GPSminiDatalogger, Microsensory LS, Córdoba, Spain; and NanoFix GEO+RF, Pathtrack Ltd., Leeds, UK.). The GPS-UHF loggers weighing 5.5 g (including harness, ~3.8 % of the mean weight at capture, males = 146.0 g ± 35 SD; females = 148.0 g ± 29) were attached as backpacks with a Teflon harness. Locations were stored on-board and downloaded via a UHF base station placed in the vicinity of the colony. Overall, we analysed 79 non-breeding tracks from the 54 adult birds (25 males and 29 females) from 20 breeding sites
All data analyses were conducted in R (V 4.2.3), and all figures were produced with ggplot2. The full data was resampled to a 1-h interval, allowing deviations of up to 20 min. We calculated movement metrics using the R package ‘fossil’. All the mixed linear models were implemented using the ‘lme4’ package. We determined daily sunrise/sunset times using the "StreamMetabolism" package.
In addition, we used third-party public data from:
- Country borders via: https://www.naturalearthdata.com/downloads/50m-cultural-vectors/
- Topography: alt_30s_bil via https://geodata.ucdavis.edu/climate/worldclim/1_4/grid/cur/
- The main inland water (e.g. rivers and deltas) present in Senegal, Gambia, Mauritania and Mali via: https://www.diva-gis.org/