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Mapping migratory routes: Avian conservation-focused opportunities for a pan-European automated telemetry network

Mitchell, Lucy; Brust, Vera; Karwinkel, Thiemo; Åkesson, Susanne; Kishkinev, Dmitry; Norevik, Gabriel; Szep, Tibor; Hedenström, Anders; Lagerveld, Sander; Helm, Barbara; Schmaljohann, Heiko

Authors

Lucy Mitchell

Vera Brust

Thiemo Karwinkel

Susanne Åkesson

Gabriel Norevik

Tibor Szep

Anders Hedenström

Sander Lagerveld

Barbara Helm

Heiko Schmaljohann



Abstract

Accelerated biodiversity loss during the Anthropocene has destabilised functional links within and between ecosystems. Migratory species that cross different ecosystems on their repeated journeys between breeding and non-breeding sites are particularly sensitive to global change because they are exposed to various, often ecosystem-specific threats. As these bring both lethal and non-lethal population impacts, many migratory species are declining, making this group especially vulnerable to global change.

To mitigate their decline, research at a continental and flyway scale is required to adequately monitor changes in the migratory and demographic processes of populations during all parts of the annual cycle. The Motus Wildlife Tracking System (Motus) could provide a solution to data gaps that exist particularly for small, migratory species. Motus is an automated telemetry system for animal tracking, which provides a collaborative network by using a single VHF radio frequency for all tracked individuals, in combination with an individual tag identifier. Motus can provide information on movements made by individuals of small migrant species, thus aiding our understanding of aspects of their migration that could impact demographic parameters.
Here we describe conservation-focused research opportunities, with a particular lense on small European migrant birds. We highlight examples from the existing network, and identify geographical gaps which, if filled, could track continent-wide movements. We conclude that Motus is a useful tool to produce individual-level migration information for a variety of small-bodied taxa, and that a drive to expand the network will improve its ability to direct conservation plans for such species.

Citation

Mitchell, L., Brust, V., Karwinkel, T., Åkesson, S., Kishkinev, D., Norevik, G., …Schmaljohann, H. (in press). Mapping migratory routes: Avian conservation-focused opportunities for a pan-European automated telemetry network. Conservation Biology,

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 15, 2024
Deposit Date Dec 17, 2024
Journal Conservation Biology
Print ISSN 0888-8892
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords migration, tracking, demographic parameters, conservation
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1019164
Publisher URL https://authorservices.wiley.com/author-resources/Journal-Authors/licensing/self-archiving.html
Additional Information embargo period for accepted manuscript 12 months since the publication date which is expected by 31st March 2025 so indicative lift of the embargo is 1st April 2026