Movement Ecology (Apr 2024)

Clinging to the top: natal dispersal tracks climate gradient in a trailing-edge population of a migratory songbird

  • Heather E. Gaya,
  • Robert J. Cooper,
  • Clayton D. Delancey,
  • Jeffrey Hepinstall-Cymerman,
  • Elizabeth A. Kurimo-Beechuk,
  • William B. Lewis,
  • Samuel A. Merker,
  • Richard B. Chandler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40462-024-00470-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Purpose Trailing-edge populations at the low-latitude, receding edge of a shifting range face high extinction risk from climate change unless they are able to track optimal environmental conditions through dispersal. Methods We fit dispersal models to the locations of 3165 individually-marked black-throated blue warblers (Setophaga caerulescens) in the southern Appalachian Mountains in North Carolina, USA from 2002 to 2023. Black-throated blue warbler breeding abundance in this population has remained relatively stable at colder and wetter areas at higher elevations but has declined at warmer and drier areas at lower elevations. Results Median dispersal distance of young warblers was 917 m (range 23–3200 m), and dispersal tended to be directed away from warm and dry locations. In contrast, adults exhibited strong site fidelity between breeding seasons and rarely dispersed more than 100 m (range 10–1300 m). Consequently, adult dispersal kernels were much more compact and symmetric than natal dispersal kernels, suggesting adult dispersal is unlikely a driving force of declines in this population. Conclusion Our findings suggest that directional natal dispersal may mitigate fitness costs for trailing-edge populations by allowing individuals to track changing climate and avoid warming conditions at warm-edge range boundaries.

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