Identifying carry-over effects of wintering area on reproductive parameters in white-winged scoters : an isotopic approach / Kirsty E.B. Gurney, Cindy J. Wood, Ray T. Alisauskas, Mark Wayland, Jean-Michel DeVink, and Stuart M. Slattery.
Material type: TextSeries: Condor. 116 251-264 Publication details: 2014Description: illustrations ; 28 cmLOC classification:- GUR
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-264).
Events during one stage of the annual life cycle of migratory birds can have lasting (i.e. carry-over) effects that
influence demographic parameters in subsequent seasons. We studied migratory connectivity and potential carry-over
effects in a declining population of sea ducks. We measured stable isotope values of carbon (d13C) and nitrogen (d15N)
in head feathers to assign breeding White-winged Scoters (Melanitta fusca; hereafter scoters) to either Atlantic or
Pacific winter populations. The discriminant function for d13C and d15N correctly classified 93% of scoters sampled from
these 2 winter areas. We then applied this classification scheme to head feathers of females breeding at Redberry Lake,
Saskatchewan, and Cardinal Lake, Northwest Territories, to stratify each breeding population by winter provenance.
We evaluated carry-over effects associated with winter location of females breeding in Saskatchewan by testing for
differences in (1) nesting phenology, (2) clutch size, (3) mid-incubation body mass, (4) nest success, and (5)
concentrations of trace elements contaminants of cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), selenium (Se), and lead (Pb) in blood,
between strata of putative winter origin. Breeding females from the Atlantic coast had later dates of nest initiation,
greater mid-incubation body mass, and also had higher concentrations of Cd (one year only), Pb, and Se, relative to
birds from the Pacific. Neither nest initiation date nor mid-incubation body mass, however, were related to
contaminant concentrations in blood. We found no differences in clutch size or nest success between putative winter
strata. Our study detected carry-over effects in the Saskatchewan population that merit further attention.