Persistent species relationships characterize migrating bird communities across stopover sites and seasons

Author:

DeSimone Joely G.1ORCID,DeGroote Lucas W.12ORCID,MacKenzie Stuart A.3,Owen Jennifer C.45ORCID,Patterson Andrea J.6ORCID,Cohen Emily B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Appalachian Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Frostburg, MD 21532

2. Powdermill Nature Reserve, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Rector, PA 15677

3. Long Point Bird Observatory, Birds Canada, Port Rowan, ON N0E 1M0, Canada

4. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824

5. Michigan State Bird Observatory, East Lansing, MI 48823

6. Braddock Bay Bird Observatory, Hilton, NY 14468

Abstract

Global migrations of diverse animal species often converge along the same routes, bringing together seasonal assemblages of animals that may compete, prey on each other, and share information or pathogens. These interspecific interactions, when energetic demands are high and the time to complete journeys is short, may influence survival, migratory success, stopover ecology, and migratory routes. Numerous accounts suggest that interspecific co-migrations are globally distributed in aerial, aquatic, and terrestrial systems, although the study of migration to date has rarely investigated species interactions among migrating animals. Here, we test the hypothesis that migrating animals are communities engaged in networks of ecological interactions. We leverage over half a million records of 50 bird species from five bird banding sites collected over 8 to 23 y to test for species associations using social network analyses. We find strong support for persistent species relationships across sites and between spring and fall migration. These relationships may be ecologically meaningful: They are often stronger among phylogenetically related species with similar foraging behaviors and nonbreeding ranges even after accounting for the nonsocial contributions to associations, including overlap in migration timing and habitat use. While interspecific interactions could result in costly competition or beneficial information exchange, we find that relationships are largely positive, suggesting limited competitive exclusion at the scale of a banding station during migratory stopovers. Our findings support an understanding of animal migrations that consist of networked communities rather than random assemblages of independently migrating species, encouraging future studies of the nature and consequences of co-migrant interactions.

Funder

NSF

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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