Carry-Over or Compensation? The Impact of Winter Harshness and Post-Winter Body Condition on Spring-Fattening in a Migratory Goose Species
Journal article
Date
2015Metadata
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Abstract
Environmental conditions at one point of the annual cycle of migratory species may lead to
cross-seasonal effects affecting fitness in subsequent seasons. Based on a long-term
mark-resighting dataset and scoring of body condition in an arctic breeding goose species,
we demonstrate a substantial effect of winter harshness on post-winter body condition.
However, this effect was compensated along the spring migration corridor, and did not persist
long enough to influence future reproduction. This highlights the importance of temporal
scale when assessing impacts of environmental effects, and suggests a state-dependent
physiological mechanism adjusting energy accumulation according to internal energy
stores carried into spring. In support of these findings, the development of body condition
was unaffected by whether geese used supplementary feeding sites or not. While there was
no effect of winter harshness on the average population pre-breeding body condition, individual
variations in early spring body condition (probably related to different life-histories)
were partly traceable throughout spring. This strongly indicates a carry-over effect on the
individual level, possibly related to differences in dominance, site use, disturbance or migration
strategy, which may potentially affect future reproduction.