Revealing patterns of nocturnal migration using the European weather radar network

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

Nilsson, C., Dokter, A., Verlinden, L., Shamoun‐Baranes, J., Schmidt, B., Desmet, P., Bauer, S., Chapman, J., Alves, J., Stepanian, P. M., Sapir, N., Wainwright, C., Boos, M., Gorska, A., Menz, M., Rodrigues, P., Leijnse, H., Zehtindjiev, P., Brabant, R., Haase, G., Weisshaupt, N., Ciach, M. and Liechti, F. 2019. Revealing patterns of nocturnal migration using the European weather radar network. Ecography. 42 (5), pp. 876-886. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.04003

AuthorsNilsson, C., Dokter, A., Verlinden, L., Shamoun‐Baranes, J., Schmidt, B., Desmet, P., Bauer, S., Chapman, J., Alves, J., Stepanian, P. M., Sapir, N., Wainwright, C., Boos, M., Gorska, A., Menz, M., Rodrigues, P., Leijnse, H., Zehtindjiev, P., Brabant, R., Haase, G., Weisshaupt, N., Ciach, M. and Liechti, F.
Abstract

Nocturnal avian migration flyways remain an elusive concept, as we have largely lacked methods to map their full extent. We used the network of European weather radars to investigate nocturnal bird movements at the scale of the European flyway. We mapped the main migration directions and showed the intensity of movement across part of Europe by extracting biological information from 70 weather radar stations from northern Scandinavia to Portugal, during the autumn migration season of 2016. On average, over the 20 nights and all sites, 389 birds passed per 1 km transect per hour. The night with highest migration intensity showed an average of 1621 birds km–1 h–1 passing the radar stations, but there was considerable geographical and temporal variation in migration intensity. The highest intensity of migration was seen in central France. The overall migration directions showed strong southwest components. Migration dynamics were strongly related to synoptic wind conditions. A wind‐related mass migration event occurred immediately after a change in wind conditions, but quickly diminished even when supporting winds continued to prevail. This first continental‐scale study using the European network of weather radars demonstrates the wealth of information available and its potential for investigating large‐scale bird movements, with consequences for ecosystem function, nutrient transfer, human and livestock health, and civil and military aviation.

Year of Publication2019
JournalEcography
Journal citation42 (5), pp. 876-886
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.04003
Open accessPublished as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
Publisher's version
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online14 Sep 2018
Publication process dates
Accepted07 Sep 2018
Copyright licenseCC BY
PublisherWiley
ISSN0906-7590

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