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      Ecomorphology of the external flight apparatus of blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla) with different migration behavior.

      Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
      Aging, Animal Migration, Animals, Body Weight, Flight, Animal, physiology, Passeriformes, anatomy & histology, Physical Exertion, Tail, Wing

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          Abstract

          An analysis of the external flight apparatus of 700 blackcaps from eight different populations (sedentary to long-distance migrators) is presented. With increasing migration distances of populations, (1) wing length, aspect ratio, and wing pointedness increase; (2) wing load decreases; (3) slots on the wing tips become relatively shorter; (4) the alula tends to be shorter in relation to wing length; and (5) the tail is shorter in relation to wing length. Although body mass increases from southern to northern populations, changes in wing length and wing area are two to three times larger than expected for simple isometric relationships. Regarding the aerodynamic background of these changes, it can be stated that traits for energy-effective flight are more strongly developed and traits for maneuverability are less developed in birds traveling longer distances, presumably as a consequence of trade-offs. Nonmigratory blackcaps from Madeira and the Cape Verde islands do not always show the traits we would expect in view of their sedentary behavior. This can be seen as a result of recent colonization of these islands by migrants or of selection by factors other than migration behavior. In migratory populations, changes between the first and the second set of primaries during first complete molt show almost the same pattern as the changes from nonmigratory to migratory populations. During molt of the primaries, blackcaps of nonmigratory populations do not show these changes. Hybrids between migrating and nonmigrating blackcap populations (Moscow and Madeira) showed intermediate values between parent populations in wing length, wing shape, and wing area; in the other variables they resembled either parent population.

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          Differential post-fledging survival of great and coal tits in relation to their condition and fledging date

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            Avian Wingtip Shape Reconsidered: Wingtip Shape Indices and Morphological Adaptations to Migration

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              THE MECHANICS OF BIRD MIGRATION

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                16055858
                10.1196/annals.1343.022

                Chemistry
                Aging,Animal Migration,Animals,Body Weight,Flight, Animal,physiology,Passeriformes,anatomy & histology,Physical Exertion,Tail,Wing

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