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Better nutritional condition changes the distribution of juvenile dispersal distances: an experiment with Spanish imperial eagles
Author(s) -
Ferrer Miguel,
Morandini Virginia
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of avian biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.022
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1600-048X
pISSN - 0908-8857
DOI - 10.1111/jav.01468
Subject(s) - biological dispersal , juvenile , biology , competition (biology) , ecology , hatching , zoology , demography , population , sociology
We investigated the distribution of juvenile dispersal distances of a territorial long‐lived species with deferred maturity, the Spanish imperial eagle Aquila adalberti . Here we used a reintroduction program as an experimental approach to test predictions of different hypotheses about the distribution of juvenile dispersal distances: competition and wandering behavior. We determined maximal juvenile dispersal distances of 59 young eagles; 1) 30 wild non‐manipulated individuals, and 2) 29 tranlocated young under an ad libitum feeding program, released with adults breeding in the area. The competitive displacement hypothesis predicts a leptokurtic distribution of distances in wild non‐manipulated young as well as in released young. Under the ‘wandering’ hypothesis, however, a leptokurtic distribution is expected in wild young but a normal distribution would be expected in young released (with adults in the release area), owing to a general improvement in the nutritional status of released young that have been fed ad libitum, as is usual in reintroduction programs. Additionally, a negative relationship between hatching date and dispersal distances is expected in wild young but no relationship in released young under ad libitum feeding. Mean maximum dispersal distances for all the juvenile eagles was 142.8 km. No differences between sexes were found, nor between populations or between wild and reintroduced young. Wild young distances were not normally distributed, being closer to a Poisson distribution. In contrast, released young with adults (under ad libitum feeding) showed a normal distribution. Wild birds showed a significant negative relationship between dispersal distance and hatching date, with young that hatched late in the season dispersing shorter distances. However, released young under ad libitum feeding showed no significant relationship between hatching date and dispersal distance. These results support the ‘wandering’ hypothesis as the main driver of the distribution of dispersal distances.

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