ABR Authors:
R. McGuire
DOI:
10.3354/meps14531
From land to sea: the fall migration of the red phalarope through the Western Hemisphere
Saalfeld, S. T., M. Valcu, S. Brown, W. English, M-A. Giroux, A-L. Harrison, J. Krietsch, K. Kuletz, J-F. Lamarre, C. Latty, N. Lecomte, R. McGuire, M. Robards, A. Scarpignato, S. Schulte, P. A. Smith, B. Kempenaers, and R. B. Lanctot. 2024. From land to sea: the fall migration of the red phalarope through the Western Hemisphere. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 729: 1–29. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14531
Understanding how and where individuals migrate between breeding and wintering areas is important for assessing threats, identifying important areas for conservation, and determining a species’ vulnerability to changing environmental conditions. Between 2017 and 2020, we tracked post-breeding movements of 72 red phalaropes Phalaropus fulicarius with satellite tags from 7 Arctic-breeding sites in the Alaskan and Central Canadian Arctic. All tracked red phalaropes left their Arctic breeding grounds (i.e., were obligate migrants) but then switched to a more facultative migration strategy with a fly-and-forage migration pattern once in the marine environment. We documented high variability in migration timing and routes, with birds often taking indirect, circuitous routes with numerous stops that greatly lengthened both the duration and distance of their southward migration. Across nearly 500 stopover areas, which were often associated with areas of presumed greater food availability, individuals spent an average of 6 d and traveled within an average area of 1880 km². Stopover areas were concentrated in onshore and nearshore habitats of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, the western edge of the Bering Strait, along the Alaska Peninsula and Aleutian Islands, and near the Pribilof Islands in Alaska. Within the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, females frequently stopped within the marginal ice zone, whereas males tended to stay on land or in open water. Our results identified important marine areas that can aid future conservation and management decisions. However, conservation of the species will also need to address the numerous direct and indirect anthropogenic threats red phalaropes experience at sea, many of which are not site-specific.