Following year-round movements in Barn Swallows using geolocators: could breeding pairs remain together during the winter? / Arizaga, J., Willemoes, M., Unamuno, E., Unamuno, J.M., Thorup, K.
Contributor(s): Arizaga, Juan | Willemoes, Mikkel | Unamuno, Edorta | Unamuno, Jose María | Thorup, Kasper | Aranzadi Zientzia Elkartea | .
Material type: Computer fileCitation: Arizaga J., Willemoes M., Unamuno E., Unamuno J.M., Thorup K. 2015. Following year-round movements in Barn Swallows using geolocators: could breeding pairs remain together during the winter?. Bird Study (on line). DOI: 10.1080/00063657.2014.998623 Publisher: [S.l.]: British Trust for Ornithology, 1/2015Content type: Texto (visual) Media type: electrónico Genre/Form: Nota científicaSummary: Abstract: The spatio-temporal schedule provided by geolocators suggests that a pair of Barn Swallows could have remained together during the non-breeding period. Data from four birds, of which two were a breeding pair, showed winter quarters from West to Central Africa. The tracks of the paired individuals coincided both spatially and temporally at a scale of <200 km throughout the non-breeding period, in contrast to the tracks of an unpaired male and female from the same region.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
---|---|---|---|---|
Publicación | Publicaciones | Not for loan |
Restringido
Abstract: The spatio-temporal schedule provided by geolocators suggests that a pair of Barn Swallows could have remained together during the non-breeding period. Data from four birds, of which two were a breeding pair, showed winter quarters from West to Central Africa. The tracks of the paired individuals
coincided both spatially and temporally at a scale of <200 km throughout the non-breeding period, in contrast to the tracks of an unpaired male and female from the same region.
Arizaga J., Willemoes M., Unamuno E., Unamuno J.M., Thorup K. 2015. Following year-round movements in Barn Swallows using geolocators: could breeding pairs remain together during the winter?. Bird Study (on line). DOI: 10.1080/00063657.2014.998623
There are no comments for this item.