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Paternal transmission of migration knowledge in a long-distance bird migrant
by
Lötberg, Ulrik
, Beal, Martin
, Isaksson, Natalie
, Åkesson, Susanne
, Byholm, Patrik
in
631/158/2039
/ 631/158/672
/ 631/158/856
/ Adults
/ Animal Migration
/ Animals
/ Biologi
/ Biological Sciences
/ Bird migration
/ Birds
/ Ecology (including Biodiversity Conservation)
/ Ekologi
/ Heredity
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Learning
/ Male
/ Migration
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural Sciences
/ Naturvetenskap
/ Overwintering behavior
/ Parents
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seasons
/ Social discrimination learning
2022
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Paternal transmission of migration knowledge in a long-distance bird migrant
by
Lötberg, Ulrik
, Beal, Martin
, Isaksson, Natalie
, Åkesson, Susanne
, Byholm, Patrik
in
631/158/2039
/ 631/158/672
/ 631/158/856
/ Adults
/ Animal Migration
/ Animals
/ Biologi
/ Biological Sciences
/ Bird migration
/ Birds
/ Ecology (including Biodiversity Conservation)
/ Ekologi
/ Heredity
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Learning
/ Male
/ Migration
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural Sciences
/ Naturvetenskap
/ Overwintering behavior
/ Parents
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seasons
/ Social discrimination learning
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Paternal transmission of migration knowledge in a long-distance bird migrant
by
Lötberg, Ulrik
, Beal, Martin
, Isaksson, Natalie
, Åkesson, Susanne
, Byholm, Patrik
in
631/158/2039
/ 631/158/672
/ 631/158/856
/ Adults
/ Animal Migration
/ Animals
/ Biologi
/ Biological Sciences
/ Bird migration
/ Birds
/ Ecology (including Biodiversity Conservation)
/ Ekologi
/ Heredity
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Learning
/ Male
/ Migration
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural Sciences
/ Naturvetenskap
/ Overwintering behavior
/ Parents
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seasons
/ Social discrimination learning
2022
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Paternal transmission of migration knowledge in a long-distance bird migrant
Journal Article
Paternal transmission of migration knowledge in a long-distance bird migrant
2022
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Overview
While advances in biologging have revealed many spectacular animal migrations, it remains poorly understood how young animals learn to migrate. Even in social species, it is unclear how migratory skills are transmitted from one generation to another and what implications this may have. Here we show that in Caspian terns
Hydroprogne caspia
family groups, genetic and foster male parents carry the main responsibility for migrating with young. During migration, young birds stayed close to an adult at all times, with the bond dissipating on the wintering grounds. Solo-migrating adults migrated faster than did adults accompanying young. Four young that lost contact with their parent at an early stage of migration all died. During their first solo migration, subadult terns remained faithful to routes they took with their parents as young. Our results provide evidence for cultural inheritance of migration knowledge in a long-distance bird migrant and show that sex-biased (allo)parental care en route shapes migration through social learning.
Animals often migrate in social groups, but little is known about the social learning of migration behaviours. Here, Byholm et al. analyse high-resolution tracking data from Caspian Terns and reveal that juveniles’ survival and learning of migration routes depend critically on following a parent.
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