2018
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12476
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A long winter for the Red Queen: rethinking the evolution of seasonal migration

Abstract: This paper advances an hypothesis that the primary adaptive driver of seasonal migration is maintenance of site fidelity to familiar breeding locations. We argue that seasonal migration is therefore principally an adaptation for geographic persistence when confronted with seasonality -analogous to hibernation, freeze tolerance, or other organismal adaptations to cyclically fluctuating environments. These ideas stand in contrast to traditional views that bird migration evolved as an adaptive dispersal strategy … Show more

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Cited by 164 publications
(184 citation statements)
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References 168 publications
(247 reference statements)
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“…In fact, despite the mostly temperate and Arctic latitudes of the breeding ranges of migratory species, this link between bird migration distances and the local climate of their breeding ranges is not trivial at all. These results support the idea that strong climatic seasonality has been an important factor in the evolution of long-distance bird migration (see Winger et al, 2019;Zink & Gardner, 2017). In addition, many species breeding in highly seasonal mountain environments could escape climatic seasonality by travelling much shorter distances that they actually do (but see Laube et al, 2015).…”
Section: Climatic Seasonality Has Triggered the Evolution Of Long-dsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…In fact, despite the mostly temperate and Arctic latitudes of the breeding ranges of migratory species, this link between bird migration distances and the local climate of their breeding ranges is not trivial at all. These results support the idea that strong climatic seasonality has been an important factor in the evolution of long-distance bird migration (see Winger et al, 2019;Zink & Gardner, 2017). In addition, many species breeding in highly seasonal mountain environments could escape climatic seasonality by travelling much shorter distances that they actually do (but see Laube et al, 2015).…”
Section: Climatic Seasonality Has Triggered the Evolution Of Long-dsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…The latter scenario assumes greater fitness benefits when migrating towards lower latitudes (as shown in Alves et al, 2013), but it does not necessarily imply tracking of the same climatic niche year-round. Thus far, no consensus has emerged to explain the biogeographic origins of seasonal bird migrations (see also Louchart, 2008;Salewski & Bruderer, 2007;Winger et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Maximizing the benefits of reproducing in a seasonal environment and minimizing the costs of annual long‐distance movement is a key determinant of distributions for migratory birds (Cox , Alerstam et al , Winger et al ), and current climate change may cause migratory tendency to decrease in some species (Austin and Rehfisch , Pulido and Berthold ). Selection for shortening migration distances as a result of warmer temperatures has been documented in fall migrations as many species are short‐stopping to winter closer to the breeding grounds (Visser et al , Heath et al , Paprocki et al ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Selection for shortening migration distances as a result of warmer temperatures has been documented in fall migrations as many species are short-stopping to winter closer to the breeding grounds (Visser et al 2009, Heath et al 2012, Paprocki et al 2014. Shortening of migration has not been expected to impact breeding distributions because philopatry is an important factor in breeding distributions (Winger et al 2018). However, anecdotal evidence of migratory birds establishing breeding populations outside of their historical breeding ranges by shortening spring migration (Yeh and Price 2004, Van der Jeugd et al 2009, Macias-Duarte 2011, Garcia-Perez et al 2013, Winkler et al 2017 indicates that migratory birds may respond to environmental change in a way that decreases philopatry.…”
Section: Eastmentioning
confidence: 99%