European Journal of Entomology (Apr 2007)
Long range movements by individuals as a vehicle for range expansion in Calopteryx splendens (Odonata: Zygoptera)
Abstract
1. Flight activity in zygopterans is generally restricted to short-range movements associated with foraging, reproductive activity and escape. Indeed, previous studies have suggested that Calopteryx species, including C. splendens, are relatively sedentary species, with a low tendency for long distance movements.2. Recent observations suggest that C. splendens is expanding its northern range in the UK; in the northeast the species is now well established in Northumberland and, in the northwest, has recently spread into south-west Scotland. The current study aimed to investigate the mobility and dispersal tendency of C. splendens in a well-established breeding population in NE England.3. A mark-release-recapture study was carried out on a population of C. splendens along a section of the River Wharfe, West Yorkshire, UK. 831 adult C. splendens were marked uniquely for individual identification in order to monitor the day-to-day, and overall, distance and direction of movement for each individual. Of these 381 were recaptured at least once.4. The majority of males (85%) and females (88%) moved a distance of 100 m or less and only five of the recaptured individuals (1.3%) moved a minimum distance in excess of 500 m. Although the median distance moved by males was greater than that for females, this was not significant. In addition, there was no significant difference in the number of either males or females moving upstream as opposed to downstream.5. The results are compared with those from other studies on calopterygid movement. Although most individual C. splendens stay within a suggested home range of approximately 300 m, clearly individuals have the potential to cover relatively long distances, and it is these latter movements that play a fundamental role in increasing the range of the species.
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