著者
Tetsuo Shimada Naoya Hijikata Ken-ichi Tokita Kiyoshi Uchida Masayuki Kurechi Hitoshi Suginome Yumi Yamada Hiroyoshi Higuchi
出版者
日本鳥学会
雑誌
ORNITHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (ISSN:13470558)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.15, no.1, pp.37-45, 2016 (Released:2016-02-05)
参考文献数
30
被引用文献数
5

Japan hosts more than 40% population of Brent Goose Branta bernicla wintering in East Asia. We used satellite-tracking technology to monitor the seasonal movements and habitat usage of Brent Goose wintering in northern Japan. We marked five geese on the Oya sandy beach, Miyagi Prefecture, northeast Honshu, on 21 January 2014. The geese utilized areas along the seacoast, especially concentrating at a small bay, close to the capture site. Most of the geese offshore were found at fishery rafts. No geese were found more than 2 km offshore or more than 6 km from the capture site along the seacoast. In early April, the geese left the southern Sanriku coast and moved up to eastern Hokkaido, crossing the sea directly or via the coastal areas of Iwate and Aomori Prefectures. The geese predominantly remained in the vicinity of the Veslovskiy Peninsula, Kunashiri (Kunashir) Island, while some were distributed along the northern coast of the Nemuro Peninsula. We identified eastern Hokkaido and Kunashiri Island as important stopover sites for Brent Goose wintering in Japan.
著者
Kaoru FUJITA Go FUJITA Hiroyoshi HIGUCHI
出版者
The Ornithological Society of Japan
雑誌
ORNITHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (ISSN:13470558)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.22, no.1, pp.67-79, 2023 (Released:2023-01-26)
参考文献数
74

Inspired by ecologists R. H. MacArthur and E. O. Wilson, who pioneered the use of islands as ideal model systems for researching the formation and maintenance of biodiversity, we studied two sympatric passerine bird species on a volcanic archipelago, in Japan. We focused on the occupancy and co-occurrence of Varied Tit Sittiparus varius and Cinereous Tit Parus cinereus, both members of the Parus guild, on the Izu Islands. Their populations range from being stable, and co-occurring, to being temporally unstable (with local extinctions, invasions, and species replacement) and even totally absent. Using results from several surveys carried out on the islands over the last 60 years, and our own contemporary surveys, we tested the ecological drivers of inter-island occupancy through occasional dispersal of these two species. We found that both species had positive relationships with island size and vegetation diversity, while Cinereous Tit exhibited a negative associating with distance to the mainland (Honshu, Japan). Cinereous Tit was also negatively correlated with Varied Tit, but their co-occurrence was positively associated with island size, connectivity, and vegetation diversity. We suspect that resource constraints play a significant role in the distributions of the two species on the islands. Varied Tit is dominant over Cinereous Tit, but Cinereous Tit is able to utilize a wider range of habitats and resources. We also discuss the potential for a competition-colonization trade-off for the two species on the islands.
著者
Hau-Jie Shiu Ken-ichi Tokita Emiko Morishita Emiko Hiraoka Yinyin Wu Hiroshi Nakamura Hiroyoshi Higuchi
出版者
The Ornithological Society of Japan
雑誌
ORNITHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (ISSN:13470558)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.5, no.2, pp.151-156, 2006 (Released:2007-02-01)
参考文献数
21
被引用文献数
24

In order to examine fidelity to migration route, breeding, wintering, and stopover sites, we analyzed the migration of two adult Grey-faced Buzzards Butastur indicus and an adult Honey-buzzard Pernis apivorus that were satellite-tracked in East Asia for more than two migration seasons. The Grey-faced Buzzards showed a high degree of route fidelity across seasons and years. On the other hand, the migration routes of the Honey-buzzard were distinctly different between fall and spring seasons, whereas, within each season they were roughly similar between years. All three raptors were strictly faithful to their breeding and wintering sites. They also showed fidelity to several stopover sites in which the raptors stayed for relatively long periods to replenish energy. Our findings have important implications for the conservation of the migratory raptors.