Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T09:20:01.490Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Breeding dispersal movements of Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti in fragmented landscape

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2021

CRISTIAN PÉREZ-GRANADOS*
Affiliation:
Ecology Department/IMEM “Ramón Margalef”, Universidad de Alicante, 03080, Alicante, Spain.
PEDRO SÁEZ-GÓMEZ
Affiliation:
Ecology Department/IMEM “Ramón Margalef”, Universidad de Alicante, 03080, Alicante, Spain.
GERMÁN M. LÓPEZ-IBORRA
Affiliation:
Ecology Department/IMEM “Ramón Margalef”, Universidad de Alicante, 03080, Alicante, Spain.
*
*Author for correspondence; email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Understanding patterns of dispersal behaviour of threatened species is important in conservation biology and population ecology, especially in fragmented landscapes. Dupont’s Lark Chersophilusduponti is a threatened passerine whose European population has declined by around 40% in the last decade. To study natal and breeding dispersal of the species, we used a long-term mark-recapture dataset (2011–2019) and analysed the records of 32 males (39 dispersal movements) and five females (five dispersal movements) captured during the breeding season at Rincón de Ademuz (Valencia, eastern Spain). Adult birds had a median breeding dispersal of 154 m (Q25-Q75 = 70.0–300.3). Among these captures, two adult males dispersed to a new patch of habitat separated by more than 5,800 m. Only one out of 26 nestlings ringed was trapped as an adult bird, which occurred at a site different from the natal territory (4,500 m). Our results show a low breeding dispersal for the species and are, in essence, in agreement with previous studies carried out in the Ebro Valley metapopulation, one of the core areas for the species in Europe. Nonetheless, unlike in the Ebro Valley, we detected movements of adult birds between habitat patches. The low recovery rate of young birds suggests that they left their natal sites and moved outside the study area or that their survival rate was very low. Future studies focused on the post-fledging survival rate and natal dispersal movements are essential to determine effective conservation measures for the species. Habitat management actions in occupied and potential sites should be carried out close to the areas inhabited by the species to increase the success rate of the interventions and the effective dispersal and therefore population connectivity.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of BirdLife International

Introduction

Animal dispersal is a key life-history trait related to gene flow, demography, and social evolution of wildlife populations (Lidicker Reference Lidicker, Petrusewicz, Golley and Ryszkowski1975, Taylor and Taylor Reference Taylor and Taylor1977, Baguette et al. Reference Baguette, Blanchet, Legrand, Stevens and Turlure2013, Aguillon et al. Reference Aguillon, Fitzpatrick, Bowman, Schoech, Clark, Coop and Chen2017). Consequently, understanding patterns of dispersal is essential in conservation biology, population ecology and biogeography, as it provides basic information to assess long-term persistence of populations in fragmented landscapes and therefore their conservation status (Baillie et al. Reference Baillie, Sutherland, Freeman, Gregory and Paradis2002, Caplat et al. Reference Caplat, Edelaar, Dudaniec, Green, Okamura, Cote, Ekroos, Jonsson, Löndahl, Tesson and Petit2016, Legrand et al. Reference Legrand, Cote, Fronhofer, Holt, Ronce, Schtickzelle, Travis and Clobert2017). Two main types of dispersal movements have been traditionally described: natal and breeding dispersal. Natal dispersal can be defined as the movement of juveniles from their natal territory to their first breeding site, while breeding dispersal is the movement of already established adults between breeding sites in successive years (Greenwood Reference Greenwood1980, Greenwood and Harvey Reference Greenwood and Harvey1982).

Usually, natal dispersal has a greater impact on populations than breeding dispersal (but see Dale et al. Reference Dale, Lunde and Steifetten2005) due to its higher frequency (number of individuals dispersing) and magnitude (dispersal distances) (Greenwood and Harvey Reference Greenwood and Harvey1982, Paradis et al. Reference Paradis, Baillie, Sutherland and Gregory1998). In fact, most avian dispersal studies have determined very low breeding dispersal, and a tendency to breed in the same area in successive years (e.g. Greenwood and Harvey Reference Greenwood and Harvey1982, Paradis et al. Reference Paradis, Baillie, Sutherland and Gregory1998, Aguillon et al. Reference Aguillon, Fitzpatrick, Bowman, Schoech, Clark, Coop and Chen2017). However, there is a large number of factors that may influence whether an individual performs a short dispersal or seeks out a new site, such as sex (females usually disperse farther than males, Greenwood and Harvey Reference Greenwood and Harvey1982, Aguillon et al. Reference Aguillon, Fitzpatrick, Bowman, Schoech, Clark, Coop and Chen2017) and sexual system (mate-site fidelity; Cézilly et al. Reference Cézilly, Dubois and Pagel2000), among others. The importance of these factors in selecting for dispersal may vary between species and populations according to their life history and how they interact with the environment. Due to the strong link between dispersal and population dynamics, knowing the dispersal movements is essential for population management and for understanding how species will respond to habitat changes and management actions. This is particularly important in species with low dispersal ability and therefore vulnerable to landscape transformation (i.e. habitat fragmentation).

Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti is a territorial resident passerine restricted to Spain and North Africa (Suárez Reference Suárez2010), whose European population is made up of about 1,300–2,400 breeding pairs (Suárez Reference Suárez2010). In Spain, the species has experienced overall a 41% decline from 2004 to 2015 (Gómez-Catasús et al. Reference Gómez-Catasús, Pérez-Granados, Barrero, Bota, Giralt, López-Iborra, Serrano and Traba2018) and it is listed as ‘Vulnerable’ by IUCN (BirdLife International 2020). Because of its cryptic colour and elusive behaviour, obtaining data on dispersion is a challenge for researchers and managers (but see Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Laiolo, Serrano and Tella2008). Prior research in the Ebro Valley metapopulation (north-eastern Spain), one of the strongholds for the species in Europe (Suárez Reference Suárez2010, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010), revealed very short breeding dispersal of Dupont’s Lark males with no detected movements between patches of suitable habitat (median values of 75 and 113 m for capture-recapture and acoustic marking, respectively; Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Laiolo, Serrano and Tella2008). This is in agreement with the low dispersal ability and low gene flow described in other studies (García et al. Reference García, Suárez, Garza, Calero-Riestra, Hernández and Pérez-Tris2008, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010, Méndez et al. Reference Méndez, Tella and Godoy2011). Although natal dispersal of the species is unknown, it has been proposed that the species may be reluctant to leave the natal site when faced with dispersal through hostile habitat (Laiolo and Tella Reference Laiolo and Tella2007). However, a record of an immature male moving up to 33 km has been reported in the Iberian System in central Spain (García-Antón et al. Reference García-Antón, Garza and Traba2015). Likewise, there are some observations of wintering individuals of unknown age hundreds of kilometres away from the closest known populations (Suárez et al. Reference Suárez, García, Sampietro and Garza2006), which suggests that the potential of the species for dispersal might be greater than expected. Due to the apparent dispersal limitations of the adult males (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010), studies focused on the dispersal behaviour of Dupont’s Lark may have great relevance for assessing long-term persistence of their populations, and in improving habitat management actions, which have been performed in many potential habitat patches (Palma Reference Palma2018, Pérez-Granados and Traba Reference Pérez-Granados and Traba2019, authors’ unpubl. data).

In this work, we aimed to: (1) estimate, based on capture-recapture data, the breeding dispersal of Dupont’s Lark in the Valencian metapopulation (eastern Spain) including, for the first time, data on female movements and the first case of natal dispersal; and (2) compare our results, from small populations in a fragmented landscape (see study area), with those obtained by Laiolo et al. (Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007) in the Ebro Valley, the second stronghold for Dupont’s Lark in Spain (around 400 male territories; Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007). We predicted that Dupont’s Lark movements in the Valencian metapopulation would be lower than in the Ebro Valley owing to the smaller patch sizes, and therefore movement limitations, in Valencia (see Table 1).

Table 1. Characteristics of the Dupont’s Lark metapopulation of Ademuz and of the Ebro Valley. Data are shown only from occupied patches. Total number of males (and mean density) in Ademuz refers to the minimum and maximum detected during the study period. Data for Ademuz were extracted from Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra (Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013) and authors’ unpublished data, while data from the Ebro Valley were extracted from Vögeli et al. (Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010).

Material and methods

Study area

The study was carried out between mid-March and mid-June 2011–2019 in Rincón de Ademuz, located in the southern extreme of the Iberian System (Valencia province, eastern Spain, 40º03’N, 01º20’W; Figure 1). This metapopulation covered the entire known distribution range of Dupont’s Lark in Valencia province (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013). Dupont’s Larks occurred in five closely and patchily distributed sites, but eight other potentially suitable habitat sites, three of them abandoned recently, were surveyed annually (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013; Figure 1). The metapopulation suffered an annual decline of around 10% between 2004 and 2011 (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013), but remained stable during the study period (population size ranged from 46 to 56 males; authors’ unpubl. data). Previous studies found that the density of the species in the Iberian System increases as the area of the habitat patches shrinks (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013), which has been related to the existence of dispersal limitations (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010). Maximum distance among patches (i.e. populations) is 2.1 km (Figure 1), which is within the maximum distance of movements recorded for the species (Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007, García-Antón et al. Reference García-Antón, Garza and Traba2015). Occupied patches averaged 152 ± 62 ha (mean ± SE) in size (range 59–199 ha).

Figure 1. Location of the potential habitat patches surveyed (polygons within Rincón de Ademuz, Valencia province). Occupied patches are painted in grey and three extinct patches are marked with black stripes. Location of the closest Dupont’s Lark populations in the provinces of Cuenca and Teruel is also shown. Inset shows the location of the study area in Spain.

The study area is located at 1,100 m asl and is characterized by a flat topography dominated by areas dedicated to crops, especially almond trees Prunus dulcis, or scrub. Vegetation at all monitored sites was dominated by low shrub species (Genista scorpius, Rosmarinus officinalis and Thymus spp.), with some scattered trees, especially junipers Juniperus thurifera and pines Pinus spp. Mean annual temperature was about 10ºC and mean annual precipitation around 550 mm (see Pérez-Granados et al. Reference Pérez-Granados, Lopez-Iborra and Seoane2017a for a detailed description of the study area).

Field procedures

Data collection was based on a census mapping method (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2017), nest-monitoring and ringing sessions (Pérez-Granados et al. Reference Pérez-Granados, López-Iborra, Garza and Traba2017b). Unoccupied sites were surveyed three times per breeding season and no individuals were detected. Occupied sites were visited eight or nine times every breeding season with a regular periodicity (usually one visit every 10 days) during the study period. On each visit we performed a dawn survey, during which we georeferenced the location of singing males (territory hereafter) with the aid of a GPS (Garmin eTrex legend HCx). To capture and mark the individuals, we placed 3–4 small spring-traps close to the location where vocalizing males were detected during the dawn survey. Each day we placed spring-traps in 3–4 different territories. Spring-traps were baited with tenebrionids and a playback equipment (MP3 and Radioschack amplifier) was used to attract birds into traps. We set traps in every identified Dupont’s Lark territory, at least three times per year. The location of the traps varied between years according to the changes in the location of the territories (i.e. singing males), and even within years according to singing male location. Similarly, we also searched intensively for colour-ringed individuals three times per year in every territory. Whenever possible, we trapped and ringed adult birds at the nest (n =16) using a passive trap (females) or spring-traps (Pérez-Granados et al. Reference Pérez-Granados, López-Iborra, Garza and Traba2017b). To facilitate reading, trap and nest captures (and recaptures) and resightings of colour-ringed individuals were all considered as part of physical marking (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Laiolo, Serrano and Tella2008).

Captures were performed during the first four hours after dawn on days with good weather conditions (no rain, mist, or strong winds). Trapped birds were ringed with a combination of one metal ring and up to three colour rings to allow individual identification at a distance. With the exception of nestlings, all trapped birds were aged as adults (birds born earlier than the current breeding season) since they cannot be differentiated from older birds after their complete moult cycle (Svensson Reference Svensson1992), which takes place during the post-breeding period. Adult birds were sexed according to the presence of brood patches (females), cloacal protuberances (males) or wing length (males > 97 mm; Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Tella, Méndez and Godoy2007, Suárez Reference Suárez2010). Nestlings were ringed at the nest, but no sex identification was possible at the time of ringing. The locations of the trappings or sightings were georeferenced using a GPS (Garmin eTrex legend HCx).

Dispersal estimation

We used the Euclidean distance between the locations of recaptured birds in successive years as a surrogate of the dispersal movements of the species (see Nathan et al. Reference Nathan, Klein, Robledo-Arnuncio, Revilla, Clobert, Baguette, Benton and Bullock2012). Distances were calculated using ArcMap software, ArcGis 10.1 (ESRI, Redlands, CA, USA). When the same bird was recaptured in more than two different years (six individuals), we measured the distance between each pair of years and treated each distance as independent data. Five birds were trapped more than once during the same breeding season, always within a radius of 150 m. In these cases, we selected only the first position on subsequent analyses, since the peak of the breeding season of the species in the study area occurs during the first month of the monitoring programme (mid-April; Pérez-Granados et al. Reference Pérez-Granados, López-Iborra, Garza and Traba2017b).

Statistical analyses

We estimated the recovery rate of ringed adults and nestlings as the proportion of ringed birds that were recaptured in the subsequent seasons. We tested for possible differences in breeding dispersal distances between Dupont’s Lark males from our study area (n = 32 males, 39 recaptures) and those reported for the Ebro Valley metapopulation (Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007). For this purpose, we used the dataset collected in the Ebro Valley provided by Paola Laiolo. This dataset contained the breeding dispersal distances of 70 males recaptured by physical recapture and 128 males resighted based on voice recognition (see details in Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007). Laiolo et al. (Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007) stated that the two methods provided similar displacement distances, with no significant differences among them. On this basis, we combined both data sets to obtain a complete data set for the Ebro Valley (n = 198). Because these data were not distributed normally (Figure 2 and Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007), differences in breeding dispersal distances between the two areas were analysed using a Mann-Whitney U test. In addition, for each study area (Ademuz and Ebro Valley) we estimated the probability density distribution of recapture distances (dispersal location kernel, sensu Nathan et al. Reference Nathan, Klein, Robledo-Arnuncio, Revilla, Clobert, Baguette, Benton and Bullock2012) using the Gaussian kernel algorithm implemented in the “density” function in R (R Development Core Team 2017). This distribution was then numerically integrated to obtain the probability of staying within or moving between distance intervals equivalent to the average diameter of a territory. We defined a territory as the 4-ha area, which is the mean core area estimated for Dupont’s Lark males during the breeding season (Garza et al. Reference Garza, Suárez, Herranz, Traba, García de la Morena, Morales, González and Castañeda2005). This territory size corresponds to a circle 225 m in diameter, a distance that is very similar to the territory-switch threshold used by Laiolo et al. (Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007). Therefore, we calculated the probability of recapturing a male within a distance of 225 m (staying in the same territory), moving one territory (recapture between 226 and 500 m) and so on. All statistical analyses were performed in R 3.4.1 (R Development Core Team 2017), and the level of significance was P < 0.05.

Figure 2. Distribution of breeding dispersal distances recorded for adult Dupont’s lark males in the study area (black bars) and in the Ebro Valley (grey bars). Data for the Ebro Valley based on Laiolo et al. (2007).

Results

A total of 120 adult (93 males, 27 females) and 26 nestling Dupont’s Larks were ringed during the study period. In subsequent years, we recaptured 32 males (male recovery rate = 34.4%) and 4 females (female recovery rate = 14.8%) corresponding to a total of 44 breeding dispersal movements, but only one bird ringed as nestling (nestling recovery rate = 3.8%). Adult Dupont’s Larks had a median breeding dispersal of 154 m (range 14–5,837, Q25–Q75 = 70.0–300.3; Figure 2). Considering only males, median breeding dispersal was 156.6 m (range 14–5,837, Q25–Q75 = 69.0–300.6), while females had a median breeding dispersal of 151.5 m (range 43–416, Q25–Q75 = 71.0–250.0). Two adult males were recaptured in different patches; both were ringed in Pinar 1 and recaptured in Losar 1 after one and three years at distances of 5,828 and 5,873 m, respectively. The only nestling recaptured as an adult was detected in a habitat patch (Losar 1) different from the natal site (Hontanar), at a distance of 4,503 m, the year after birth. This bird was sexed as female when recaptured based on wing length (95 mm) and the presence of a brood patch.

Breeding dispersal distances of Dupont’s Lark males differed significantly between our study area and the Ebro Valley (Mann-Whitney U test, z = −2.67, P = 0.008). Adult males from the Ebro Valley showed a shorter median breeding dispersal (101.2 m, range 0–2193, Q25–Q75 = 8.0–200.0), than males in our study area (154.0 m, range 14–5837, Q25–Q75 = 70.0–300.3). This significant difference remained even when the two males recaptured in different patches in Ademuz were excluded from the analysis (Mann-Whitney U test, z = −2.23, P = 0.026). The probability of remaining in the same territory was higher in the Ebro Valley (0.78) than in the study area (0.63), while the probabilities of moving the distance equivalent to one or two territories were lower in the Ebro Valley (0.13 and 0.04, respectively) than in Valencia (0.26 and 0.05, respectively). On the contrary, the probability of dispersing the equivalent distance to between three and 10 territories was higher in the Ebro Valley (0.04) than in our study area (0.005) (Figure 3). In the Ebro Valley, no birds were retrapped further than 2,200 m away, and therefore the probability of dispersing further than 10 territories was 0, while in our study area this probability was 0.05 (Figure 3).

Figure 3. Probability of dispersing a variable number of territories by adult Dupont’s lark males in the study area (black bars) and in the Ebro Valley (grey bars). Data for the Ebro Valley based on Laiolo et al. (Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007).

Discussion

The present study provides the first information on breeding dispersal distance of the Dupont’s Lark for each sex and the only known case of natal dispersal. Our findings are consistent with a previous study carried out in the Ebro Valley metapopulation (Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Laiolo, Serrano and Tella2008), a less fragmented landscape than our study area. In both areas analysed, adult males showed high fidelity to remain in their breeding territories or to carry out reduced breeding dispersal movements, equivalent to a territory size (joint probability of staying or moving one territory: 90–92% in both areas). However, the differences in the landscape configuration among metapopulations may explain some of the differences found in inter- and intra-patch scale movements (Table 1). One of the main differences was detected in the probability of dispersing beyond 900 m (i.e. four territories), which was null in our study area and low, but constant, in the Ebro Valley (Figure 3). Occupied patches in Ademuz averaged 152 ha (largest diameter < 1.3 km) and so dispersal movement further than 4–5 territories within a patch is not possible. In contrast, in the Ebro Valley, 32% of the occupied habitat patches are larger than 150 ha and host 70% of the breeding population (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010), thus allowing Dupont’s Lark males to make longer intra-patch dispersal movements. The larger patch size could explain why movements of adults between patches were not detected in the Ebro Valley, despite the larger numbers of males and of patches within that metapopulation (Table 1). In a later study, nine males were classified as immigrants by acoustic marking in the Ebro Valley (maximum dispersal of 20 km, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010). However, as the age of these immigrants is unknown, it is not possible to classify these immigrants as cases of breeding or natal dispersal.

In the same way, population density (closely related to patch-habitat size; Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010) may play an important role in breeding dispersal movements of the species. Most patches of the Ebro Valley are larger than 200 ha, where density is half or one third that of smaller patches (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010). The same pattern has been described in the Iberian System, where our study area is located (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013). All habitat patches in Ademuz are smaller than 200 ha and showed high densities (Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2013). Therefore, high density in Ademuz may result in increased competition among males to occupy the best sites for breeding and consequently increase the pressure for breeding dispersal. Indeed, there is evidence of high intraspecific competition in Ademuz, with a known case of clutch failure due to agonistic behaviour at a nest located in an area with high male density (five males ringed within a radius of 150 m around the nest during the same breeding season, Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra Reference Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2015). This pattern suggests a density-dependent breeding dispersal process where males located in high-density populations might be more likely to disperse (within or between patches; Matthysen Reference Matthysen2005). Although we have no proper data about the sex ratio of the species in the monitored metapopulation it is likely that a large proportion of adult males in Ademuz may remain unpaired during the breeding season, according to the known male-biased ratio for the species in other three areas (range 0.61–0.79 % of males, Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Tella, Méndez and Godoy2007; Suárez et al. Reference Suárez, García, Carriles, Calero, Agirre, Justribó and and Garza2009). Nonetheless, the presence of unpaired males does not necessarily reduce the competition among males. Indeed, a considerable fraction of floaters may increase territorial behaviour and competitive mate guarding of territorial males (reviewed by Penteriani et al. Reference Penteriani, Ferrer and Delgado2011 and Moreno Reference Moreno2016).

Another non-exclusive process that may explain the long movements registered in our study area is the decline of male numbers in the Pinar 1 patch, possibly caused by loss of habitat quality due to expansion of pines (Pinus spp.). Both cases of inter-patch dispersal movements involved males that moved from Pinar 1, where the decline is intense (13 males in 2011 to two in 2019, Sáez-Gómez et al. Reference Sáez-Gómez, Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2019), towards the habitat patch with the largest number of males (Losar 1: 12 males in 2011 to 19 in 2019, Sáez-Gómez et al. Reference Sáez-Gómez, Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra2019), located 5 km away. Due to the male-biased ratio in Dupont’s Lark (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Tella, Méndez and Godoy2007; Suárez et al. Reference Suárez, García, Carriles, Calero, Agirre, Justribó and and Garza2009), it is possible that males in smaller populations could fail more often in attracting a female and thus make longer-distance movements looking for mates (Dale et al. Reference Dale, Lunde and Steifetten2005). Further research is needed to assess the importance of both mechanisms (density-dependent dispersal and movements from declining sites) in determining breeding dispersal in this species.

The only nestling later recaptured as an adult was detected at a distance of 4,503 m). The low recapture rate of birds ringed as juveniles (3.8%), when compared to adults (30%), and a prior record of an immature bird (ringed with juvenile plumage in mid- September) moving further than 33 km (García-Antón et al. Reference García-Antón, Garza and Traba2015), suggest that a high proportion of immatures may perform long dispersal movements between sites. The high density in the habitat patches surveyed may force juveniles to disperse through unfavourable habitat to establish a territory, which may partly explain the lower recapture rate detected for juvenile birds in our study. Under these circumstances, their survival probabilities may be compromised when dispersing and/or using marginal habitats. However, our results should be taken with caution since only one bird ringed as a nestling was recaptured and we have no data about post-fledging mortality neither about the survival of immatures during their first year, which may have had a considerable impact (e.g. Naef-Danzer et al. Reference Naef‐Daenzer, Widmer and Nuber2001, Cox et al. Reference Cox, Thompson, Cox and Faaborg2014, Shitikov et al. Reference Shitikov, Grudinskaya, Makarova, Vaytina, Fedotova, Samsonov and Grabovsky2020). Although the adult recovery rate (30%) may also seem low it is arguably related to the difficulty of trapping that elusive bird species. Using capture-mark-recapture models we estimated the probability of recapture of adult males present at the study area during the breeding season as 0.31, while we did not find any evidence of transients (Pérez-Granados et al. in prep). This value supports that the apparently low percentage of adults recaptured is related to the difficulty for trapping the species rather than to breeding dispersal movements outside the study area.

The dispersal movements presented here are a novel contribution to the knowledge of this threatened species but also one of the few studies describing detailed inter-annual movements in the Alaudidae (but see Delius Reference Delius1965, de Juana et al. Reference De Juana, Suárez, Ryan, Alström, Donald, Hoyo, Elliott and Christie2004, Wolf et al. Reference Wolf, Slater, Pearson, Anderson and Moore2020). Our results corroborate low breeding dispersal for Dupont’s Lark but show that some birds may move between sites. This is in agreement with recent records of birds recaptured at distances of 20–33 km (Vögeli et al. Reference Vögeli, Serrano, Pacios and Tella2010, García-Antón et al. Reference García-Antón, Garza and Traba2015) and the detection of wintering Dupont’s Larks at distances further than 100 km from the closest known breeding populations (Suárez et al. Reference Suárez, García, Sampietro and Garza2006). Overall, we are aware that our results are based on small sample sizes but believe that they improve our knowledge adequately on the breeding dispersal pattern of the species, with the exception of some long movements outside the studied areas, which may have been undetected. Further research should focus on increasing the number of known natal dispersal movements and performing detailed studies of post-fledging survival and breeding dispersal movements using GPS technology. The effectiveness of habitat management actions at potential sites, such as tree removal, promotion of extensive grazing and scrub clearance, designed to facilitate dispersal movements and increase population connectivity in fragmented landscapes would benefit from better knowledge on the dispersal processes of the species. Therefore, based on our results, conservation interventions aimed at increasing the habitat available to maintain larger populations or to improve habitat quality for the species (Palma Reference Palma2018, Pérez-Granados and Traba Reference Pérez-Granados and Traba2019) would have greater probability of success if performed within a 1-km radius of areas already occupied by the species, since adult birds rarely disperse further than that distance (Laiolo et al. Reference Laiolo, Vögeli, Serrano and Tella2007).

Acknowledgements

This study was supported by Levantina y Asociados de Minerales, S.A., as part of the project “Estudios de investigación aplicados a la conservación de las poblaciones de alondra ricotí (Chersophilus duponti) en el entorno del municipio de Vallanca”. We wish to thank the Servicio de Vida Silvestre of Conselleria D´infraestructures, Territori i Medi Ambient (Generalitat Valenciana) for ringing permits and supporting our work. We are grateful to Paola Laiolo, Matthias Vögeli, David Serrano and José Luis Tella for sending us their original dataset about dispersal distances of Dupont’s Lark in the Ebro Valley. We thank Alberto Lucas for his collaboration with the project and Carlos Ponce for his collaboration with bird ringing. We also thank two anonymous referees and Paul Donald whose helpful comments contributed to improving the paper. Finally, we thank Nieves Herrero-García, Juancho Calleja, Beatriz Vigalondo and Eva Serrano-Davies for their help. Our methodology complies with current Spanish laws in the matter of avifauna capture and the three authors were authorized for ringing activities.

References

Aguillon, S. M., Fitzpatrick, J. W., Bowman, R., Schoech, S. J., Clark, A. G., Coop, G. and Chen, N. (2017) Deconstructing isolation-by-distance: The genomic consequences of limited dispersal. PLoS Genet. 13: e1006911.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baguette, M., Blanchet, S., Legrand, D., Stevens, V. M. and Turlure, C. (2013) Individual dispersal, landscape connectivity and ecological networks. Biol. Rev. 88: 310326.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baillie, S. R., Sutherland, W. J., Freeman, S. N., Gregory, R. D. and Paradis, E. (2002) Consequences of large‐scale processes for the conservation of bird populations. J. Appl. Ecol. 37: 88102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BirdLife International (2020) Chersophilus duponti. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020: e.T22717380A173711498. Downloaded on 4 February 2021.Google Scholar
Caplat, P., Edelaar, P., Dudaniec, R. Y., Green, A. J., Okamura, B., Cote, J., Ekroos, J., Jonsson, P. R., Löndahl, J., Tesson, S.V.M. and Petit, E. J. (2016) Looking beyond the mountain: Dispersal barriers in a changing world. Front. Ecol. Env. 14: 261268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cézilly, F., Dubois, F. and Pagel, M. (2000) Is mate fidelity related to site fidelity? A comparative analysis in Ciconiiforms. Anim. Behav. 59: 11431152.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cox, W. A., Thompson, F. R. III, Cox, A. S. and Faaborg, J. (2014) Post‐fledging survival in passerine birds and the value of post‐fledging studies to conservation. J. Wildl. Manage. 78: 183193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dale, S., Lunde, A. and Steifetten, Ø. (2005) Longer breeding dispersal than natal dispersal in the ortolan bunting. Behav. Ecol. 16: 2024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delius, J. D. (1965) A population study of skylarks Alauda arvensis. Ibis 107: 466492.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Juana, E., Suárez, F., Ryan, P., Alström, P. and Donald, P. (2004) Family Alaudidae (Larks). Pp. 496601 in Hoyo, J. Del Elliott, A. and Christie, D. A., eds. Handbook of the birds of the world. Vol. 9. Cotingas to pipits and wagtails. Barcelona, Spain: Lynx Edicions.Google Scholar
García, J. T., Suárez, F., Garza, V., Calero-Riestra, M., Hernández, J. and Pérez-Tris, J. (2008) Genetic and phenotypic variation among geographically isolated populations of the globally threatened Dupont’s lark Chersophilus duponti . Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 46: 237251.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
García-Antón, A., Garza, V. and Traba, J. (2015) Dispersión de más de 30 km en un macho de primer año de alondra ricotí (Chersophilus duponti) en el Sistema Ibérico. I Workshop Nacional de la Alondra ricotí Chersophilus duponti: Estrategias Futuras. Estación Ornitológica de Padul, Granada, 13 junio 2015.Google Scholar
Garza, V., Suárez, F., Herranz, J., Traba, J., García de la Morena, E. L., Morales, M. B., González, R. and Castañeda, M. (2005) Home range, territoriality and habitat selection by the Dupont’s lark Chersophilus duponti during the breeding and postbreeding periods. Ardeola 52: 133146.Google Scholar
Gómez-Catasús, J., Pérez-Granados, C., Barrero, A., Bota, G., Giralt, D., López-Iborra, G. M., Serrano, D. and Traba, J. (2018) European population trends and current conservation status of an endangered steppe-bird species: the Dupont’s lark Chersophilus duponti PeerJ 6: e5627.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenwood, P. J. (1980) Mating systems, philopatry, and dispersal in birds and mammals. Anim. Behav. 28: 11401162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenwood, P. J. and Harvey, P. H. (1982). The natal and breeding dispersal of birds. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 13: 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laiolo, P. and Tella, J. L. (2007) Erosion of animal cultures in fragmented landscapes. Front. Ecol. Environm. 5: 6872.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laiolo, P., Vögeli, M., Serrano, D. and Tella, J. L. (2007) Testing acoustic versus physical marking: two complementary methods for individual‐based monitoring of elusive species. J. Avian Biol. 38: 672681.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Legrand, D., Cote, J., Fronhofer, E. A., Holt, R. D., Ronce, O., Schtickzelle, N., Travis, J. M. J. and Clobert, J. (2017) Eco‐evolutionary dynamics in fragmented landscapes. Ecography 40: 925.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lidicker, W. Z. Jr. (1975) The role of dispersal in the demography of small mammals. Pp. 103128 in Petrusewicz, K. Golley, E. B. and Ryszkowski, L., eds. Small mammals: productivity and dynamics of populations. London, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Matthysen, E. (2005) Density‐dependent dispersal in birds and mammals. Ecography 28: 403416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Méndez, M., Tella, J. L and Godoy, J. A. (2011) Restricted gene flow and genetic drift in recently fragmented populations of an endangered steppe bird. Biol. Conserv. 144: 26152622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moreno, J. (2016) The unknown life of floaters: The hidden face of sexual selection. Ardeola 63: 4977.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naef‐Daenzer, B., Widmer, F. and Nuber, M. (2001) Differential post‐fledging survival of great and coal tits in relation to their condition and fledging date. J. Anim. Ecol. 70: 730738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nathan, R., Klein, E., Robledo-Arnuncio, J. J. and Revilla, E. (2012) Dispersal kernels: review. Pp. 187210 in Clobert, J. Baguette, M. Benton, T. G. and Bullock, J. M., eds. Dispersal ecology and evolution. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Palma, C. (2018) La colaboración a nivel local favorece el último reducto burgalés de alondra ricotí. Quercus 384: 44.Google Scholar
Paradis, E., Baillie, S. R., Sutherland, W. J. and Gregory, R. D. (1998) Patterns of natal and breeding dispersal in birds. J. Anim. Ecol. 67: 518536.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penteriani, V., Ferrer, M. and Delgado, M. D. M. (2011) Floater strategies and dynamics in birds, and their importance in conservation biology: towards an understanding of nonbreeders in avian populations. Anim. Conserv. 14: 233241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Granados, C. and López-Iborra, G. M. (2013) Census of breeding birds and population trends of the Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti in Eastern Spain. Ardeola 60: 143150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Granados, C. and López-Iborra, G. M. (2015) Nest failure owing to intraspecific agonistic behaviour in Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti . Ornithol. Sci. 14: 117121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Granados, C. and López-Iborra, G. M. (2017) Assessment of counting methods used for estimating the number of territorial males in the endangered Dupont’s Lark. Ardeola 64: 7584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Granados, C. and Traba, J. (2019) Testing the conspecific attraction hypothesis with Dupont’s Larks, a resident species of songbird in central Spain. J. Field Ornithol. 90: 277285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Granados, C., Lopez-Iborra, G. M. and Seoane, J. (2017a) A multi-scale analysis of habitat selection in peripheral populations of the endangered Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti . Bird Conserv. Internatn. 27: 398413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Granados, C., López-Iborra, G. M., Garza, V. and Traba, J. (2017b) Breeding biology of the endangered Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti in two separate Spanish shrub-steppes. Bird Study 64: 328338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
R Development Core Team. (2017) R: A language and environment for statistical computing, version R-3.4.1. Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing.Google Scholar
Sáez-Gómez, P., Pérez-Granados, C. and López-Iborra, G. M. (2019) Estudios aplicados a la conservación de las poblaciones de alondra ricotí (Chersophilus duponti) en el entorno del municipio de Vallanca. Informe IX. Instituto Multidisciplinar para el Estudio del Medio Ramón Margalef. Universidad de Alicante. Generalitat Valenciana. Unpublished report.Google Scholar
Shitikov, D., Grudinskaya, V., Makarova, T., Vaytina, T., Fedotova, S., Samsonov, S. and Grabovsky, A. (2020) Low first-year apparent survival of passerines in abandoned fields in northwestern Russia. The Condor 122(5): duaa008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suárez, F., ed. (2010) La alondra ricotí, Chersophilus duponti. Madrid, Spain: Dirección General para la Biodiversidad. Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Medios Rural y Marino.Google Scholar
Suárez, F., García, J. T., Sampietro, F. J. and Garza, V. (2006). The non-breeding distribution of Dupont’s Lark Chersophilus duponti in Spain. Bird Conserv. Internatn. 16: 317323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suárez, F., García, J. T., Carriles, E., Calero, M., Agirre, A., Justribó, J. H. and Garza, V. (2009) Sex-ratios of an endangered lark after controlling for a male-biased sampling. Ardeola 56: 113118.Google Scholar
Svensson, L. (1992) Identification guide to European passerines. 4th edition. Stockholm, Sweden: L. Svensson.Google Scholar
Taylor, L. R. and Taylor, R. A. (1977) Aggregation, migration and population mechanics. Nature 265: 415421.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vögeli, M., Serrano, D., Tella, J. L., Méndez, M. and Godoy, J. A. (2007) Sex determination of Dupont’s lark Chersophilus duponti using molecular sexing and discriminant funtions. Ardeola 54: 6979.Google Scholar
Vögeli, M., Laiolo, P., Serrano, D. and Tella, J. L. (2008) Who are we sampling? Apparent survival differs between methods in a secretive species. Oikos 117: 18161823.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vögeli, M., Serrano, D., Pacios, F. and Tella, J. L. (2010) The relative importance of patch habitat quality and landscape attributes on a declining steppe-bird metapopulation. Biol. Conserv. 143: 10571067.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. L., Slater, G. L., Pearson, S. F., Anderson, H. E. and Moore, R. (2020) Range-wide patterns of natal and breeding dispersal in the Streaked Horned Lark. Northwest Sci. 94: 3143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Characteristics of the Dupont’s Lark metapopulation of Ademuz and of the Ebro Valley. Data are shown only from occupied patches. Total number of males (and mean density) in Ademuz refers to the minimum and maximum detected during the study period. Data for Ademuz were extracted from Pérez-Granados and López-Iborra (2013) and authors’ unpublished data, while data from the Ebro Valley were extracted from Vögeli et al. (2010).

Figure 1

Figure 1. Location of the potential habitat patches surveyed (polygons within Rincón de Ademuz, Valencia province). Occupied patches are painted in grey and three extinct patches are marked with black stripes. Location of the closest Dupont’s Lark populations in the provinces of Cuenca and Teruel is also shown. Inset shows the location of the study area in Spain.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Distribution of breeding dispersal distances recorded for adult Dupont’s lark males in the study area (black bars) and in the Ebro Valley (grey bars). Data for the Ebro Valley based on Laiolo et al. (2007).

Figure 3

Figure 3. Probability of dispersing a variable number of territories by adult Dupont’s lark males in the study area (black bars) and in the Ebro Valley (grey bars). Data for the Ebro Valley based on Laiolo et al. (2007).