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      The buffer effect and large-scale population regulation in migratory birds.

      Nature
      Animals, Birds, physiology, Ecology, Great Britain, Population Dynamics, Reproduction

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          Abstract

          Buffer effects occur when sites vary in quality and fluctuations in population size are mirrored by large changes in animal numbers in poor-quality sites but only small changes in good-quality sites. Hence, the poor sites 'buffer' the good sites, a mechanism that can potentially drive population regulation if there are demographic costs of inhabiting poor sites. Here we show that for a migratory bird this process can apply on a country-wide scale with consequences for both survival and timing of arrival on the breeding grounds (an indicator of reproductive success). The Icelandic population of the black-tailed godwit, Limosa limosa islandica, wintering in Britain has increased fourfold since the 1970s (ref. 5) but rates of change within individual estuaries have varied from zero to sixfold increases. In accordance with the buffer effect, rates of increase are greater on estuaries with low initial numbers, and godwits on these sites have lower prey-intake rates, lower survival rates and arrive later in Iceland than godwits on sites with stable populations. The buffer effect can therefore be a major process influencing large-scale population regulation of migratory species.

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          Most cited references14

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          Competition for early arrival in migratory birds

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            Phenotype-dependent arrival time and its consequences in a migratory bird

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              Density-Dependent Fecundity by Habitat Heterogeneity in an Increasing Population of Spanish Imperial Eagles

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                11473317
                10.1038/35086568

                Chemistry
                Animals,Birds,physiology,Ecology,Great Britain,Population Dynamics,Reproduction
                Chemistry
                Animals, Birds, physiology, Ecology, Great Britain, Population Dynamics, Reproduction

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