Arriving depleted after crossing of the Mediterranean: obligatory stopover patterns underline the importance of Mediterranean islands for migrating birds

Author:

Barboutis Christos12,Navarrete Elisabeth2,Karris Georgios3,Xirouchakis Stavros4,Fransson Thord5,Bounas Anastasios6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Applications and Technology , University of Ioannina , Ioannina , GR-45110 , Greece

2. Antikythira Bird Observatory, Hellenic Ornithological Society/BirdLife Greece , Themistokleous 80 , Athens , GR-10681 , Greece

3. Lab of Environmental Physics, Energy and Environmental Biology, Department of Environment, Faculty of Environment , Ionian University , Panagoula, GR-29100, Zakynthos , Greece

4. Natural History Museum of Crete , University of Crete, University Campus (Knossos) , GR-71409 Heraklion, Crete , Greece

5. Department of Environmental Research and Monitoring , Swedish Museum of Natural History , , Stockholm , Sweden

6. Department of Biological Applications and Technology , University of Ioannina , Ioannina , , Greece

Abstract

Abstract Hundreds of millions of birds reach the Mediterranean islands or Mediterranean coast of Europe every spring after having crossed the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea. Using data from three small insular stopover sites, we calculated body mass without fuel for 18 trans-Saharan passerine migrants. We subsequently used arrival fuel loads coupled with potential flight range estimates to assess the percentage of birds that are forced to perform an obligatory stopover after crossing the Mediterranean Sea due to fuel depletion. Average arrival fuel loads were among the lowest ever recorded in the Mediterranean region and minimum body mass values recorded for several species were lower than any other individual value reported. The percentage of birds that needed to replenish their energy stores before resuming their northward migration journey varied from 0% to 50% depending on the species and locality studied. Based on conservative estimates at least 180 million birds of our study species are expected to migrate through Greece, 14% of which would not be able to resume their migration without refueling. The significance of small islands and coastal sites in the Mediterranean as obligatory refuelling sites is discussed and their conservation value for migratory birds is highlighted under the perspective of climate change.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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