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Annual migration routes, stopover patterns and diurnal activity of Eurasian Bitterns Botaurus stellaris wintering in China

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posted on 2019-05-29, 15:48 authored by Dehai Gu, Yisheng Chai, Yanbing Gu, Jianhua Hou, Lei Cao, Anthony David Fox

Eurasian Bitterns Botaurus stellaris caught in winter in eastern China summered in the Russian Far East.

To identify migration timing, duration and routes, as well as stopover sites, used by Eurasian Bitterns in the Russian Far East flyway and obtain basic information on behaviour and ecology from tracking data.

We tracked two Eurasian Bitterns caught in China with global positioning system/mobile communications loggers for one and three years respectively, to identify their migration routes and schedules. We used the distance moved between successive fixes to determine their diurnal activity patterns.

The two individuals wintered in eastern China and travelled a mean of 4221 ± 603 km (in 2015–17) and 3844 km (2017) to summer in the Russian Far East. Results from one bird have shown that in all three years, the bird was significantly more active during the day than at night, although the absolute differences varied with season, being most nocturnally active in summer. The most surprising result from this bird was the flexibility in spring migration and the lack of summer site fidelity.

The study identified previously unknown migration routes of the Eurasian Bittern in East Asia, and suggested that the species is generally more active during the day throughout the year.

Funding

The work was supported by the National Key Research and Development Programme of China [grant number 2016YFC0500406]; the Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Strategic Programme, Water Ecological Security Assessment, the Major Research Strategy for Middle and Lower Yangtze River [grant number ZDRW-ZS-2017-3-3]; International Cooperation and Exchange project NSFC [grant number 31661143027]; the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 31670424], [grant number 31700330]; China Biodiversity Observation Networks (Sino BON); Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [grant number 2018CDJDWL0011]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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