Migration and mass change of white-rumped sandpipers in north and south America
Arquivos
Data
1991
Orientador(es)
Coorientador(es)
Membro(s) da banca
Fonte
Tipo
Página inicial
621
Página final
636
DOI
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
The Wilson Bulletin
Resumo
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.