Avian Conservation and Ecology | 卷:2 |
Avian Conservation and Ecology Home > Vol. 2, Iss. 2 > Art. 1 > Abstract mullie Are Boreal Ovenbirds, Seiurus aurocapilla, More Prone to Move across Inhospitable Landscapes in Alberta’s Boreal Mixedwood Forest than in Southern Québec’s Temperate Deciduous Forest? | |
André Desrochers1  Marc-André Villard2  Marc Bélisle3  | |
[1] Université Laval; | |
[2] Université de Moncton; | |
[3] Université de Sherbrooke; | |
关键词: forest fragmentation; homing; landscape ecology; microevolution; | |
DOI : 10.5751/ACE-00153-020201 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Population life-history traits such as the propensity to move across inhospitable landscapes should be shaped by exposure to landscape structure over evolutionary time. Thus, birds that recently evolved in landscapes fragmented by natural disturbances such as fire would be expected to show greater behavioral and morphological vagility relative to conspecifics that evolved under less patchy landscapes shaped by fewer and finer-scaled disturbances, i.e., the resilience hypothesis. These predictions are not new, but they remain largely untested, even for well-studied taxa such as neotropical migrant birds. We combined two experimental translocation, i.e., homing, studies to test whether Ovenbird, Seiurus aurocapilla, from the historically dynamic boreal mixedwood forest of north-central Alberta (n = 55) is more vagile than Ovenbird from historically less dynamic deciduous forest of southern Québec (n = 89). We found no regional difference in either wing loading or the response of homing Ovenbird to landscape structure. Nevertheless, this study presents a heuristic framework that can advance the understanding of boreal landscape dynamics as an evolutionary force.
【 授权许可】
Unknown