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LSM1303 ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR

Supplemental information for the lectures

The Black-tailed Godwit - maintaining pair bonds across seasons


Photo by Marek Szczepanek

Gunnarsson, T. G., J. A. Gill, T. Sigurbjörnsson & W. J. Sutherland, 2004. Pair bonds: Arrival synchrony in migratory birds. Nature, 431(646), doi:10.1038/431646a.

Abstract - Synchronous arrival of pairs of migratory birds at their breeding grounds is important for maintaining pair bonds and is achieved by pairs that remain together all year round. Here we show that arrival [in Iceland] is also synchronized in paired individuals of a migratory shorebird, the black-tailed godwit (Limosa limosa islandica), even though they winter hundreds of kilometres apart [in Europe] and do not migrate together. The mechanisms required to achieve this synchrony and prevent 'divorce' illustrate the complexity of migratory systems.

20080310-godwit_migration
Published Monday, March 10, 2008 10:51 PM by N. Sivasothi
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About N. Sivasothi

Sivasothi is lecturing Biodiversity, Ecology, Structure and Function, Marine Biology and Animal Behaviour with the Department of Biological Sciences. His interests include otters, mangroves, museum databases, coastal ecology, tree-climbing crabs and conservation of biodiversity. He is also the national coordinator of the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore and Toddycats! Volunteers of the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research, NUS.