The influence of wind selectivity on migratory behavioral strategies
Authored by Jennifer D McCabe, Brian J Olsen, Bipush Osti, Peter O Koons
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arx141
Sponsors:
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Air and water currents affect the timing and energy expenditure of many
migratory animals, and therefore selection of favorable currents is
important for optimal migratory performance. However, waiting for
favorable currents also incurs costs. Here we conduct an optimality
analysis to determine how wind selectivity affects 3 migratory
currencies: time, energy, and risk. To describe variation in these
metrics under varying degrees of selectivity, we constructed an
individual-based model to simulate fall migration of passerines across
eastern North America, allowing birds to use different thresholds of
wind profit as the criterion for daily departure. A gradient of
thresholds were tested across a range of realistic wind currents, from
initiating flights only on nights when winds were directed in their
preferred migratory direction (highly selective), to flying under most
wind conditions (low selectivity). Our analysis indicated that relative
mortality risk was lowest at intermediate selectivity; energy expended
during flight was least for the most selective individuals; and of those
that successfully completed migration, time spent on migration was
lowest for the least selective birds. We solved for the optimal range of
wind selectivity and show that this departure criterion alone can
produce a tradeoff between time and energy that has been seen in many
other behavioral contexts. While we solved for optima using some
conditions specific to eastern North America, we show that variation in
wind selectivity at departure can produce migratory behaviors that mimic
the classic ``time-minimizer{''} and ``energy-minimizer{''} strategies
developed from measurements of wild birds across multiple continents.
Tags
individual-based models
Migration
Evolution
Orientation
birds
Mate Choice
Bird migration
Avian migration
Coastal gulf
Long-distance migrants
Optimal migration theory
Wind profit
Wind selectivity
Flight
altitude
Spring stopover
G songbird