TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of breeding grounds and annual routines of the newly discovered bohaii subspecies of Black-tailed Godwits
AU - Zhu, Bingrun
AU - Verhoeven, Mo
AU - Loonstra, Jelle
AU - Sanchez Aguilar, Lisa
AU - Hassell, Chris J.
AU - Leung, Kar Sin Katherine
AU - Lei, Weipan
AU - Zhang, Zhengwang
AU - Piersma, Theunis
N1 - This research was funded by the Natural Science Foundation of China [31830089, 31801985], the National Geographic ?Air and Water Conservation? Fund [GEFC-02-16], SEE Foundation, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), NERC [NE/H008527/1] with contributions of WWF-Netherlands and the Spinoza Premium 2014 of NWO Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research to TP to keep the research of Global Flyway Network in northwest Australia going. We thank all the volunteers and colleagues from Beijing Normal University and the Global Flyway who joined or offered their help in Tianjin, Nanpu and Thailand. We thank Shifu Guo, Jan Visser, Pipe Abad, Qingshan Ma, Shunlong Liu, Gu Mo, Jianmin Wang and Zhiwei Tian for their great support with catching and taking care of godwits. We thank Pavel Tomkovich, David Melville, T?mas Gunnarsson, Philip Round and Chenxing Yu for providing their local knowledge of the black-tailed godwit in Russia, China, South Korea, Iceland and Thailand. We thank Hebo Peng, Tong Mu, Chi-Yeung Choi, Lin Zhang and Jing Li, the latter of SBS in China, for assembling and making available counts, sightings and photos of godwits in China. We thank Jesse Conklin, Eldar Rakhimberdiev, Julia Karagicheva, Petra de Goeij and Hacen El-Hacen for suggestions to improve the manuscript. This work was authorised by the Forestry Departments of the Binhai New Area of Tianjin city and the Luannan County, Tangshan city, Hebei Province, China.
PY - 2021/9/26
Y1 - 2021/9/26
N2 - The Bohai Black-tailed Godwit (Limosa limosa bohaii) is a newly discovered subspecies in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway. Based on satellite tracking of 21 individuals that were tagged in northern Bohai Bay, China, from 2016 to 2018, we here describe the annual cycle of this subspecies. All the birds had Thailand as their southernmost ‘winter’ destination. The spring departure was in late March during northward migration, Bohai Bay was the first stopping site where they spent on average 39 days (± SD = 6 d), followed by Inner Mongolia and Jilin province (stopping for 8 d ± 1 d). The arrival of the breeding grounds in the Russian Far East was centred in late May. Two breeding sites were detected, with average locations 1100 km apart; the eastern site was beyond the known Asian breeding distribution of the Black-tailed Godwit. Southward migration started in late June, with the godwits tending to make longer stops at the same two main stopping sites used in the spring, i.e. Inner Mongolia and Jilin province (32 ± 5 d) and Bohai Bay (44 ± 8 d), with some individuals making a third stop in the middle-lower reaches of the Yangtze River in southern China (12 ± 4 d). By the end of September, most tracked individuals had arrived in Thailand. Compared with the previously known subspecies, bohaii godwits have strikingly different schedules of migration and moult, this study thus adding to the knowledge about intraspecific diversity of black-tailed godwits in the East Asian-Australian Flyway.
AB - The Bohai Black-tailed Godwit (Limosa limosa bohaii) is a newly discovered subspecies in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway. Based on satellite tracking of 21 individuals that were tagged in northern Bohai Bay, China, from 2016 to 2018, we here describe the annual cycle of this subspecies. All the birds had Thailand as their southernmost ‘winter’ destination. The spring departure was in late March during northward migration, Bohai Bay was the first stopping site where they spent on average 39 days (± SD = 6 d), followed by Inner Mongolia and Jilin province (stopping for 8 d ± 1 d). The arrival of the breeding grounds in the Russian Far East was centred in late May. Two breeding sites were detected, with average locations 1100 km apart; the eastern site was beyond the known Asian breeding distribution of the Black-tailed Godwit. Southward migration started in late June, with the godwits tending to make longer stops at the same two main stopping sites used in the spring, i.e. Inner Mongolia and Jilin province (32 ± 5 d) and Bohai Bay (44 ± 8 d), with some individuals making a third stop in the middle-lower reaches of the Yangtze River in southern China (12 ± 4 d). By the end of September, most tracked individuals had arrived in Thailand. Compared with the previously known subspecies, bohaii godwits have strikingly different schedules of migration and moult, this study thus adding to the knowledge about intraspecific diversity of black-tailed godwits in the East Asian-Australian Flyway.
KW - annual cycle
KW - Bohai Bay
KW - bohaii
KW - EAAF
KW - Limosa limosa
KW - migration
KW - timing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85115743398&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/01584197.2021.1963287
DO - 10.1080/01584197.2021.1963287
M3 - Article
SN - 0158-4197
VL - 121
SP - 292
EP - 302
JO - Emu
JF - Emu
ER -