Authors
Elly C Knight, Autumn‐Lynn Harrison, Amy L Scarpignato, Steven L Van Wilgenburg, Erin M Bayne, Janet W Ng, Emily Angell, R Bowman, R Mark Brigham, Bruno Drolet, Wendy E Easton, Timothy R Forrester, Jeffrey T Foster, Samuel Haché, Kevin C Hannah, Kristina G Hick, Jacques Ibarzabal, Tara L Imlay, Stuart A Mackenzie, Alan Marsh, Liam P McGuire, Gretchen N Newberry, David Newstead, Andrea Sidler, Pam H Sinclair, Jaime L Stephens, David L Swanson, Junior A Tremblay, Peter P Marra
Publication date
2021/5
Journal
Ecography
Volume
44
Issue
5
Pages
665-679
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Migratory connectivity is the degree to which populations are linked in space and time across the annual cycle. Low connectivity indicates mixing of populations while high connectivity indicates population separation in space or time. High migratory connectivity makes individual populations susceptible to local environmental conditions; therefore, evaluating migratory connectivity continuously across a species range is important for understanding differential population trends and revealing places and times contributing to these differences. The common nighthawk Chordeiles minor is a widespread, declining, long‐distance migratory bird. Variable population trends across the nighthawk breeding range suggest that knowledge of migratory connectivity is needed to direct conservation. We used GPS tags to track 52 individuals from 12 breeding populations. We estimated migratory connectivity as 0.29 (Mantel …
Total citations
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