Unexpected migration patterns in a high-latitude breeding songbird: Evidence from multi-sensor geolocators and isotopes
收藏DataONE2026-01-08 更新2026-01-17 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:cebae09714fb32e90f44d57ea48e473840b65446924233c37c6fe315801c60c8
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Seasonal migration allows animals to use habitat where conditions are unfavorable for part of the year but may constrain breeding ranges due to the costs of longer migrations as ranges expand poleward. In species with large ranges, high-latitude breeding populations may employ different migration strategies allowing them to persist far from other core nonbreeding areas. The myrtle warbler (Setophaga coronata coronata) has two disjunct nonbreeding ranges in North and Central Americaâone along the Gulf Coast and the other on the Pacific. Previous work indirectly linked birds breeding in Alaska with the Pacific nonbreeding area, suggesting that high latitude populations evolved a shorter migration route. We directly tested this hypothesis using geolocators measuring both light and atmospheric pressure to track Alaskan myrtle warbler migration in fine detail and inferred nonbreeding areas using hydrogen isotopes for a larger sample of birds breeding in Alaska, British Columbia, and Alberta...., We deployed 30 multisensor geolocators (Migrate Tech BARP30Z11-DIP) on myrtle warblers (Setophaga coronata coronata) breeding in Far North Bicentennial Park, Anchorage, AK in June 2022 and recovered 6 of these geolocators in June 2023. The geolocators sampled light intensity every minute, recording the maximum intensity every 5 minutes, and recorded pressure and temperature every 20 minutes.
Light data (.lux) was adjusted for clock drift, and raw geolocator data files (.lux, .deg) were trimmed to remove data recorded after activation of the tag but before deployment on the bird, and after removal from the bird but before deactivation.
Light data was processed with the R packages TwGeos and GeoLight. Pressure data was processed both alone and in combination with light data using the R package GeoPressureR.
We inferred wintering areas for 167 myrtle warblers breeding in Anchorage, Alaska (n = 46), northern British Columbia (n = 54), and Alberta (n = 67) using stable hydrogen i..., , # Myrtle warbler geolocation and stable isotope data and analysis code
[https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.cfxpnvxhp](https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.cfxpnvxhp)
## Description of the data and file structure
Full-year multisensor geolocator data (light, atmospheric pressure, temperature) collected for six myrtle warblers breeding in Anchorage, AK in June 2022-23. Stable hydrogen isotope data generated from greater covert feathers collected from 167 myrtle warblers breeding in Anchorage, AK, northern British Columbia, and Alberta.
### Files and variables
#### Compressed archives (CG179.zip, CG181.zip, CG193.zip, CG194.zip, CG206.zip, CG207.zip) each contain data from one geolocator
Archives are named for the geolocator ID (recorded in Geolocator_and_Control_Bird_Sampling.csv). All dates and times are GMT/UTC. Within each archive are the following directories and files:
#### Directory: GeoID\_Raw Data â Contains raw data files produced by a geolocator
##### GeoID\_Date\_driftadj.lux
* **...,
创建时间:
2026-01-08



