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1 December 2003 SURVIVAL AND MOVEMENT OF POSTFLEDGING JUVENILE HARLEQUIN DUCKS
HEIDI M. REGEHR
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Abstract

Age specific survival and movement are important components of demography and population structure, and quantification of these rates is useful for management and conservation. However, information on the postfledging ecology of waterfowl species frequently is unavailable to managers. I studied postfledging survival and movements of juvenile Harlequin Ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus) in the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia, using radio marking and capture-mark-recapture analysis of banded birds captured at coastal wintering areas. Survival of juvenile females was high, providing evidence that female winter survival may be similar among age groups. Radio-marked juvenile males were more likely to die than juvenile females, and juvenile males had lowest local survival rates of all sex-age classes. Proportions of banded juveniles found at their capture location during their second winter did not differ significantly between males and females, suggesting equal dispersal rates, and at least 25% (n = 9) of radio-marked females moved >30 km from their capture location. These results were unexpected, based on previous evidence for female philopatry and theories of male- biased dispersal in waterfowl, and suggest that males and females both likely contribute to gene flow and demographic connection among populations.

HEIDI M. REGEHR "SURVIVAL AND MOVEMENT OF POSTFLEDGING JUVENILE HARLEQUIN DUCKS," The Wilson Bulletin 115(4), 423-430, (1 December 2003). https://doi.org/10.1676/03-031
Received: 14 March 2003; Accepted: 1 November 2003; Published: 1 December 2003
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