The Migration of North American Birds (1935)
Part 4
The males and females of some species may migrate either simultaneously or separately. In the latter case it is usually the males that arrive first, sometimes great flocks of male birds, as in the red-winged blackbird, reaching a locality several days before any of the females. This is particularly the rule in spring; the first robins are usually found to be males, as also are the first song sparrows (_Melospiza melodia_), rose-breasted grosbeaks (_Hedymeles ludovicianus_), and scarlet tanagers (Piranga erythromelas). This early arrival of the males has been explained on the theory of territorial possession, under which the male selects the area where it elects to breed, each individual attempting to protect a definite territory from trespass by other males of his own kind, at the same time singing or otherwise announcing his presence and inviting the later arriving females to examine the territory that he has selected for nesting. The long-billed marsh wren (_Telmatodytes palustris_) is a noteworthy example, and the males of this species may enthusiastically build several dummy nests before the females arrive.
In a few species, the males and females apparently arrive at the breeding grounds together and proceed at once to nest building. In fact among the shore birds, ducks, and geese, courtship and mating may take place, in whole or in part, while the birds are in the South or on their way north, so that when they arrive at the northern nesting grounds they are paired and ready to proceed at once with the raising of their families. Mallards and black ducks may be observed in pairs as early as January, the female leading and the male following when they take flight. Naturally these mated pairs migrate north in company, and it was largely to protect such species that duck shooting in spring was abolished by Federal law several, years ago.
Many shore birds nest well within the Arctic Circle, and it is the opinion of ornithologists that most of these birds share, at least in part, the habits of the phalaropes, a family in which the male assumes the entire care of the eggs and young. If this be true, it explains why in southern latitudes so many of the earliest fall arrivals are females that may have deserted the breeding grounds after the eggs were laid.
Migratory flights are frequently accomplished in close flock formation, as with the shore birds, blackbirds, and waxwings, and especially some of the sparrows--the snow buntings (_Plectrophenax nivalis_), longspurs, juncos, and tree sparrows (_Spizella arborea_). Other species, however, though they travel in flocks, maintain a very loose formation; examples are the turkey vultures (_Cathartes aura_), the hawks, swifts, blue jays, swallows, warblers, and bluebirds. Still others, the grebes, great horned owls (_Bubo virginianus_), winter wrens (_Nannus hiemalis_), shrikes, and belted kingfishers (_Megaceryle alcyon_), for example, ordinarily travel alone, and when several are found in close proximity it is an indication that they have been drawn together by unusual conditions, such as abundant food.
=WHERE BIRDS MIGRATE=
DISTANCES OF MIGRATION VARY
Definite evidence shows that both the length and the duration of the migratory journey vary greatly. The bobwhite and the western quails, the cardinal (_Richmondena cardinalis_), the Carolina wren (_Thryothorus ludovicianus_), and probably some of the titmice and woodpeckers, which are apparently nonmigratory, may round out their full period of existence without at any time going more than 10 miles from the nest where they were hatched.
SHORT AND UNDETERMINED MIGRATIONS
Song sparrows, meadow larks (_Sturnella_), blue jays (_Cyanocitta cristata_), and some other species make such short migrations that the movement is difficult to detect, as individuals may be found in one area throughout the year. Thus, at the southern part of the range there is merely a concentration in winter, the summer individuals being entirely sedentary. Speculation is useless on the distances of individual migration without definite evidence concerning the precise winter quarters of birds that summer in a particular part of the breeding range of the species, but from the records of banded birds important evidence is becoming available. Eventually it may be possible to say definitely just how far the song sparrows that nest in northern New England and the Maritime Provinces of Canada travel to their winter quarters, and whether the blue jays of New York and the upper Mississippi Valley remain throughout the winter in their breeding areas, or move farther south and relinquish their places to individuals from southern Canada.
An illustration of what is now known on this subject is found in the case of the robin. This bird occurs in the Middle Atlantic States throughout the year, in Canada only in summer, and along the Gulf coast only as a winter resident. On the Atlantic coast its movements are readily ascertained, since, for example, in the section about Washington, D. C., the breeding robin is the southern variety (_Turdus migratorius achrusterus_), which is found there from the first of April to the last of October, when its place is taken (in smaller numbers) by the northern robin (_T. m. migratorius_), which arrives about the middle of October and remains until the following April. It is probable that a similar interchange of individual robins occurs throughout a large part of the rest of its range, the hardy birds from the north being the winter tenants in the abandoned summer homes of the southern birds.
The red-winged blackbirds that nest in northern Texas are almost sedentary, but in winter they are joined by representatives of other subspecies that nest as far north as the Mackenzie Valley.
VARIABLE MIGRATIONS WITHIN SPECIES
The difference in characters between subspecies has been used by students of migration to discover other interesting facts concerning variations of the migratory flight between closely related birds that breed in different latitudes. The familiar eastern fox sparrow (_Passerella iliaca iliaca_), for example, breeds from northwestern Alaska to Labrador, and in winter is found concentrated in the southeastern part of the United States. It thus travels a long distance each year. On the west coast of the continent, however, six subspecies of this bird breed in rather sharply delimited ranges, extending from the region of Puget Sound and Vancouver Island to Unimak Island, at the end of the Alaska Peninsula. One of these, known as the sooty fox sparrow (_P. i. fuliginosa_), breeds in the Puget Sound area and makes practically no migration at all, while the other races, nesting on the coast of British Columbia and Alaska, are found in winter chiefly in California. The races that breed farthest north are in winter found farthest south, illustrating a tendency for those birds that are forced to migrate to pass over those so favorably located that they have no need to leave their breeding areas, while the northern birds settle for the winter in the unoccupied areas farther south (fig. 12).
Another example of the same kind is found in the case of the Maryland yellowthroat (_Geothlypis trichas_) of the Atlantic coast. Birds occupying the most southern part of the general range are almost nonmigratory, residing throughout the year in Florida, while those breeding as far north as Newfoundland go to the West Indies for the winter, thus passing directly over the home of their southern relatives.
The palm warbler (_Dendroica, palmarum_), which breeds from Nova Scotia and Maine west and northwest to southern Mackenzie, has been separated into two subspecies. Those breeding in the interior of Canada (_D. p. palmarum_) make a 3,000-mile journey from Great Slave Lake to Cuba, passing through the Gulf States early in October. After the bulk have passed, the palm warblers from the Northeastern States and Provinces (_D. p. hypochrysea_) drift slowly into the Gulf coast region, where they remain for the winter. Their migratory journey is about half as long as that of the northwestern subspecies.
There is no invariable law governing the distance of migration, although in general it is found that where a species has an extensive range, the subspecies that breed farthest north go farthest south to spend the winter
FALL FLIGHTS NOT FAR SOUTH OF BREEDING RANGES
Some other species that have extensive summer ranges, for instance, the pine warbler (_Dendroica pinus_), rock wren (_Salpinctes obsoletus_), field sparrow (Spizella pusilla), loggerhead shrike (_Lanius ludovicianus_), and black-headed grosbeak (Hedymeles melanocephalus), are found to concentrate during the winter season in the southern part of the breeding range, or to occupy additional territory that is only a short distance farther south. The entire species may thus be confined within a restricted area for the period of winter, and then, with the return of warmer weather, spreads out to reoccupy the full range.
There are many species, including the tree sparrow, slate-colored junco, and Lapland longspur (_Calcarius lapponicus_), that nest in Canada and winter in the United States; while others, including the vesper sparrow (_Pooecetes gramineus_), chipping sparrow (_Spizella passerina_), grackles, red-winged blackbird, bluebird, the woodcock (_Philohela minor_), and several species of ducks, nest in the northern United States and move south for the winter to areas along the Gulf of Mexico. This list includes the more hardy species, some individuals of which may linger in protected places well within the reach of severe cold, as, for example, Wilson's snipe, or jacksnipe (_Capella delicata_), which frequently is found during subzero weather in parts of the Rocky Mountain region where warm springs assure a food supply. More than 100 of our summer birds leave the United States entirely and spend the winter id the West Indies or in Central America or South America. For example, the Cape May warbler (_Dendroica tigrina_), which breeds from northern New England, northern Michigan, and northern Minnesota, north to New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and nearly to Great Slave Lake, is concentrated in winter chiefly in the West Indies, its metropolis at this season being the island of Hispaniola.
LONG-DISTANCE MIGRATIONS
Some of the common summer residents are not content with a trip to northern South America, but push on across the Equator and finally come to rest for the winter in the pampas of Argentina, or even in Patagonia. Thus some species that are more or less associated with, each other in summer, as nighthawks, barn swallows, cliff swallows, and some of the thrushes may also occupy the same general winter quarters in Brazil. Some individual nighthawks and barn swallows (fig. 13) travel still farther, and of all North American land birds these species probably have the longest migration route, as they occur north to Yukon and Alaska, and south to Argentina, 7,000 miles away. Such seasonal flights are exceeded in length, however, by the journeys of several species of water birds, chiefly members of the suborder of shore birds. In this group are 19 species that breed north of the Arctic Circle and winter in South America, 6 of them going as far south as Patagonia, and thus having a migration route more than 8,000 miles in length.
The arctic tern (_Sterna paradisaea_) is the champion "globe trotter" and long-distance flier (figs. 14 and 15). Its name "arctic" is well earned, as its breeding range is circumpolar and it nests as far north as it can find a suitable place. The first nest to be found in this region was only 7½° from the North Pole, and it contained a downy chick surrounded by a wall of newly-fallen snow that had been scooped out by the parent. In North America it breeds south in the interior to Great Slave Lake, and on the Atlantic coast to Massachusetts. After the young are grown, the arctic terns disappear from their North American breeding grounds, and a few months later they may be found in the Antarctic region, 11,000 miles away. Until very recently the route followed by these hardy fliers was a complete mystery, for although a few scattered individuals have been noted south as far as Long Island, the species is otherwise practically unknown along the Atantic coasts of North America and South America. It is, however, known as a migrant on the west coast of Europe and Africa. By means of numbered bands the picture is now developing of what is apparently not only the longest but also one of the most remarkable of all migratory journeys.
Judging by the evidence at present available, it seems likely that the arctic terns of eastern North America originally found their way here from the Old World, probably by way of Iceland and Greenland. Consequently when the time comes for them to migrate to winter quarters they do not go directly south as do the common (_Sterna hirundo_) and Forster's terns (_S. forsteri_), but instead, they fly back eastward along their ancestral route across the Atlantic to the shores of Europe and then go south along the African coast to their winter home; those that breed in the northwestern part of the continent, as in Alaska, probably migrate chiefly down the western coast, as the species is not infrequently reported on the coast of California and also on the western coast of South America.
The evidence yielded by banding consists of only three definite cases, but their interpretation seems to permit but one conclusion: All three birds were banded as downy chicks, one on July 3, 1913, at Eastern Egg Rock, Maine,[3] and the other two at the Red Islands, Turnevik Bay, Labrador, on July 22, 1927, and July 23, 1928. The first was found dead in the Niger River delta, West Africa, in August 1917, while the Labrador birds were recovered near La Rochelle, France, on October 1, 1927, and at Margate, near Port Shepstone, Natal, South Africa, on November 14, 1928. The flight shown by this last record is the longest known, the trip, between 8,000 and 9,000 miles, being accomplished in less than 3 months.
[Footnote 3: Recorded at the time of banding as a common tern, a natural error, as the downy young of common and arctic terns look almost exactly alike.]
Probably no other animal in the world enjoys as many hours of daylight as does the arctic tern, since for these birds the sun never sets during their nesting season in the northern part of the range, while during their sojourn in the south, daylight is continuous. During several months of the year they have 24 hours of daylight and during the other months considerably more daylight than darkness.
=ROUTES OF MIGRATION=
While it is beyond question that certain general directions of flight are constantly followed by migratory birds, it is well to remember that the term "migration route" is to some extent a theoretical concept, concerned entirely with the lines of general advance or retreat of a species, rather than the exact course followed by individual birds. Even the records of banded birds usually show no more than the places of banding and recovery, and one must have recourse to intermediate records and to reasoning based on probabilities to fill in details of the flyway actually traversed between the two points.
There is also infinite variety in the routes covered during migration by different species. In fact, the choice of migration highways is so wide that it seems as if the routes of no two species coincide. Differences in distance traveled, in time of starting, in speed of flight, in geographical position, in latitudes of breeding and of wintering grounds, and in other factors, all contribute to this great variation of migration routes. Nevertheless, there are certain factors that serve to guide the avian travelers along more or less definite lines, and it is possible to define general lines of migration for the majority of species.
It has frequently been observed that migrating birds have a tendency to follow major topographic lines on the earth's surface when their trend is in the general direction of the birds' journey. Bird migration is generally thought of as a north-and-south movement, with the lanes of heavier concentration following the coasts, mountain ranges, and principal river valleys. To a considerable extent this is the case, particularly in North America, where the coast lines, mountain chains, and the larger rivers in general run north and south. Students of American birds thus have exceptionally good opportunities to study migratory movements. In cases where the migration is a long one, however, the notion must be abandoned that the birds' flight is restricted to particular narrow routes that follow river valleys and the like, as many species seem to disregard utterly such apparently good natural flyways as river valleys. For example, the Arkansas River has a general east and west course for a great part of its length, and while it does constitute a highway for many perching birds en route from the Mississippi Valley to the Rocky Mountain region, some of the hawks and many ducks and shore birds pay the valley scant attention. They may arrest their fall journey to feed among cottonwoods or along sand bars, but when ready to resume their flight they leave the river and fly directly south over the more or less arid region that lies between the Arkansas and the Rio Grande.
WIDE AND NARROW MIGRATION LANES
When birds start their southward migration, the movement necessarily involves the full width of the breeding range. Later, there is a convergence of the lines of flight taken by individual birds, owing to the conformation of the land mass, and as the species proceeds southward the width of the occupied region becomes less and less. An example of this is provided by the common kingbird (_Tyrannus tyrannus_), which breeds from Newfoundland to British Columbia, a summer range 2,800 miles wide. On migration, however, its paths converge, until in the southern part of the United States the occupied area extends from Florida to the mouth of the Rio Grande, a distance of only 900 miles, and still farther south the migration path is further restricted. In the latitude of Yucatan it is not more than 400 miles wide, and it is probable that the great bulk of the species moves in a belt that is less than half that width.
A migration route, therefore, may be anything from a narrow path that adheres closely to some definite geographical feature, such as a river valley or a coast line, to a broad boulevard that leads in the desired direction and follows only the general trend of the land mass. Also it is to be remembered that whatever main routes are described, there remain a multitude of tributary and separate minor routes. In fact, with the entire continent of North America crossed by migratory birds, the different groups or species frequently follow lines that may repeatedly intersect those taken by others of their own kind or by other species. The arterial routes, therefore, must be considered merely as indicating paths of migration on which the tendency to concentrate is particularly noticeable.
In considering the width of migration lanes it will be obvious that certain species, as the knot (_Calidris canutus_) and the purple sandpiper (_Arquatella maritima_), which are normally found only along the coasts, must have extremely narrow routes of travel. They are limited on one side by the broad waters of the ocean and on the other by land and fresh water, both of which are unsuited to furnish the food that is desired and necessary to the well being of these species.
Among land birds that have a definite migration, the Ipswich sparrow (_Passerculus princeps_) has what is probably the most rstricted migration range of any species. It is known to breed only on Sable Island, Nova Scotia, and it winters along the Atlantic coast south to Georgia. Living constantly within sound of the surf, it is rarely more than a quarter of a mile from the outer beach, and is entirely at home among the sand dunes and their sparse covering of coarse grass.
Harris's sparrow (_Zonotrichia querula_) supplies an interesting example of a narrow migration route in the interior of the country (fig. 16). This fine, large finch is known to breed only in the region from Fort Churchill, on the west shore of Hudson Bay, northwest to the shores of Great Bear Lake. Very few actual breeding records of the species are available, but these are sufficient to indicate that the breeding range is in the strip of country characterized by more or less stunted timber just south of the limit of trees. When it begins its fall migration, this bird necessarily covers the full width of its breeding area. Then it proceeds almost directly south, or slightly southeasterly, the area covered by the majority of the species becoming gradually constricted, so that by the time it reaches the United States it is most numerous in a belt about 500 miles wide, extending across North Dakota to central Minnesota. Harris's sparrows are noted on migration with fair regularity east to the western shore of Lake Michigan, and west to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, but the great bulk of the species moves north and south through a relatively narrow path in the central part of the continent. Present knowledge suggests that the reason for this narrow migration range is the close association that Harris's sparrow maintains with a certain type of habitat, including brushy places, thickets, edges of groves, and weed patches. While these environmental conditions are found in other parts of the country, the region crossed by this sparrow presents almost a continuous succession of habitat of this type. Its winter range extends from southeastern Nebraska and northwestern Missouri, across eastern Kansas and Oklahoma and through a narrow section of central Texas, at places hardly more than 150 miles wide.