Habitat use, survival, and migration of a little‐known East Asian endemic, the yellow‐throated bunting Emberiza elegans

Author:

Heim Wieland123ORCID,Antonov Aleksey4ORCID,Kunz Friederike15,Sander Martha Maria67,Bastardot Marc8,Beermann Ilka19,Heim Ramona Julia10,Thomas Alexander11,Volkova Vera12

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Landscape Ecology University of Münster Münster Germany

2. University of Turku Turku Finland

3. Swiss Ornithological Institute Sempach Switzerland

4. Khingansky State Nature Reserve Arkhara Russia

5. Independent Researcher Muenster Germany

6. Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology University of Turin Turin Italy

7. NABU (Naturschutzbund Deutschland) e.V. Berlin Germany

8. University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

9. EuroNatur Foundation Radolfzell Germany

10. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

11. Independent Researcher Leipzig Germany

12. State budgetary educational institution of additional education of the city of Moscow "Zelenograd Palace of Creativity for Children and Youth" Zelenograd Russia

Abstract

AbstractBasic information on the ecology of species is key for their conservation. Here we study the ecology of the little‐known yellow‐throated bunting Emberiza elegans based on a multi‐year study on its breeding grounds in the Russian Far East. For the first time in this species, we quantified breeding habitat parameters, calculated sex‐specific apparent survival, and determined individual nonbreeding locations using light‐level geolocation. We found that the habitat around song posts of male yellow‐throated buntings is characterized by tree and shrub layers on richly littered moist ground. Habitat use overlaps with co‐occurring Tristram's Buntings Emberiza tristrami and Black‐faced Buntings E. spodocephala, but territories differ especially in tree cover and litter cover. Based on 4 years of color‐ringing data of 72 individuals, we calculated an apparent survival rate of 36%, with higher survival estimates for male than for female yellow‐throated buntings. We found no effect of carrying a geolocator on survival. We retrieved six geolocators from males. All birds migrated south‐westward during autumn and spent the nonbreeding season at locations in China 700–1700 km away from their breeding sites. At least two individuals spent the boreal winter outside of the known range in northern or central China. Birds left the breeding area between early October and early November and returned between mid‐March and mid‐April. Our data on habitat use, survival rate, and migratory connectivity will help to assess threats to the populations of this enigmatic species, which might include habitat loss due to forest fires on the breeding grounds, and unsustainable harvest for consumption during the nonbreeding season.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference67 articles.

1. Range‐wide breeding habitat use of the critically endangered Yellow‐breasted Bunting Emberiza aureola after population collapse

2. Survival Explains Sex Ratio in an Introduced Mandarin DuckAix galericulataPopulation

3. Geolocator tagging of east Siberian bluethroats;Bensch S.;Journal für Ornithologie,2022

4. Biodiversity Center of Japan. (2011).Web‐GIS Atlas of Birds: Yellow‐throated Bunting.https://www.biodic.go.jp/birdRinging_en/atlas/Emberiza_elegans/Emberiza_elegans_en.html

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