Could bi‐axial orientation explain range expansion in a migratory songbird?

Author:

Wynn Joe1ORCID,Fandos Guillermo2ORCID,Delmore Kira3,Van Doren Benjamin M.45ORCID,Fransson Thord6,Liedvogel Miriam178ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institut für Vogelforschung ‘Vogelwarte Helgoland' Wilhelmshaven Germany

2. Department of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid Spain

3. Texas A&M University College Station TX USA

4. Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University Ithaca NY USA

5. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

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

7. MPRG Behavioural Genomics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology Plön Germany

8. Biology and Environmental Sciences Department, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg Oldenburg Germany

Abstract

The likelihood of a new migratory route emerging is presumably a function of 1) the associated fitness payoff and 2) the probability that the route arises in the first place. It has been suggested that diametrically opposed ‘reverse' migratory trajectories might be surprisingly common and, if such routes were heritable, it follows that they could underlie the rapid evolution of divergent migratory trajectories. Here, we used Eurasian blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla; ‘blackcap') ringing recoveries and geolocator trajectories to investigate whether a recently evolved northwards autumn migratory route – and accompanying rapid northerly wintering range expansion – could be explained by the reversal of each individual's population‐specific traditional southwards migratory direction. We found that northwards autumn migrants were recovered closer to the sites specified by an axis reversal than would be expected by chance, consistent with the rapid evolution of new migratory routes via bi‐axial variation in orientation. We suggest that the surprisingly high probability of axis reversal might explain why birds expand their wintering ranges rapidly and divergently, and propose that understanding how migratory direction is encoded is crucial when characterising the genetic component underlying migration.

Publisher

Wiley

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