Fuelling decisions in migratory birds: geomagnetic cues override the seasonal effect

Author:

Kullberg Cecilia1,Henshaw Ian1,Jakobsson Sven1,Johansson Patrik2,Fransson Thord3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Stockholm University106 91 Stockholm, Sweden

2. Geological Survey of Sweden, 751 28 UppsalaSweden

3. Swedish Museum of Natural History, Bird Ringing CentrePO Box 50 007, 104 05 Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Recent evaluations of both temporal and spatial precision in bird migration have called for external cues in addition to the inherited programme defining the migratory journey in terms of direction, distance and fuelling behaviour along the route. We used juvenile European robins ( Erithacus rubecula ) to study whether geomagnetic cues affect fuel deposition in a medium-distance migrant by simulating a migratory journey from southeast Sweden to the wintering area in southern Spain. In the late phase of the onset of autumn migration, robins exposed to the magnetic treatment attained a lower fuel load than control birds exposed to the ambient magnetic field of southeast Sweden. In contrast, robins captured in the early phase of the onset of autumn migration all showed low fuel deposition irrespective of experimental treatment. These results are, as expected, the inverse of what we have found in similar studies in a long-distance migrant, the thrush nightingale ( Luscinia luscinia ), indicating that the reaction in terms of fuelling behaviour to a simulated southward migration varies depending on the relevance for the species. Furthermore, we suggest that information from the geomagnetic field act as an important external cue overriding the seasonal effect on fuelling behaviour in migratory birds.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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