2016
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12486
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Interannual variation and long‐term trends in proportions of resident individuals in partially migratory birds

Abstract: Partial migration - a part of a population migrates and another part stays resident year-round on the breeding site - is probably the most common type of migration in the animal kingdom, yet it has only lately garnered more attention. Theoretical studies indicate that in partially migratory populations, the proportion of resident individuals (PoR) should increase in high latitudes in response to the warming climate, but empirical evidence exists for few species. We provide the first comprehensive overview of t… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Winter feeding, in combination with climate change, was found to allow previously migrating warm‐dwelling species to become resident at the northern edges of their distribution (Carey, ). However, recent work shows that in partially migratory land birds the wintering and breeding population sizes have changed at the same rate; therefore, the proportion of wintering birds has remained the same (Meller et al ., ). Also, the result that CTI w has changed similarly in the whole country despite the stronger temperature increase in the north goes against our initial expectations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Winter feeding, in combination with climate change, was found to allow previously migrating warm‐dwelling species to become resident at the northern edges of their distribution (Carey, ). However, recent work shows that in partially migratory land birds the wintering and breeding population sizes have changed at the same rate; therefore, the proportion of wintering birds has remained the same (Meller et al ., ). Also, the result that CTI w has changed similarly in the whole country despite the stronger temperature increase in the north goes against our initial expectations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…It follows, therefore, that in partially migratory populations residency may offer complementary fitness benefits to those offered by migration (Lundberg, ; Zúñiga et al, ). In the case of conditional strategies, these may refer to individual states such as sex or body condition (Hegemann, Marra, & Tieleman, ; Warkentin, James, & Oliphant, ), or external conditions, such as population density (Grayson & Wilbur, ) or environmental conditions (Chapman et al, ; Lack, ; Lundberg, ; Meller et al, ). Additionally, the prevalence of each strategy within a population may itself influence the relative fitness benefits conferred by either (Kokko, ; Lundberg, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We hypothesize that winter populations of partial migrants increased more than residents. Partial migrants can benefit from favourable circumstances during the breeding and non‐breeding season, and/or from a shift of wintering ranges towards the north because of more favourable winter conditions (Brommer, ; Meller et al ., ; Välimäki et al ., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%