CEMAVE
URI permanente desta comunidadehttps://bdc.icmbio.gov.br/handle/cecav/1399
Centro Nacional de Pesquisa e Conservação de Aves Silvestres
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Resultados da Pesquisa
Item Migration and mass change of white-rumped sandpipers in north and south America(The Wilson Bulletin, 1991) Harrington, B. A.; Leeuwenberg, F. J.; Lara-Resende, Susana; McNeil, R.; Thomas, B. T.; Grear, J. S.; Martinez, E. F.White-rumped Sandpipers {Calidris fuscicollis) migrate between Canadian Arctic breeding areas and “wintering” areas in Patagonia, one of the longest animal migra tions in the Western Hemisphere. Migrant White-rumped Sandpipers employ both long distance, nonstop, and short-distance multiple-stop flights. Southbound migrants fly over the Atlantic ocean from northeastern North America to South America. They then gradually move southeast along northeastern coasts before turning inland in trans-Amazonian travel requiring about one month. Northward migration routes from Patagonia evidently are sim ilar, but are traversed in a rapid series of long nonstop flights. Staging zones are unknown in northern South America during north migration, in the Caribbean basin, or on the Atlantic coastal plain of the U.S. A major staging area is identified in the Great Plains, where birds evidently prepare for a last remaining flight to the Arctic. The migration system of this small sandpiper makes the species vulnerable to loss of strategic migration habitats.