Sex-ratio and short-term cold-adaptation of a typical migratory songbird
(Tarsiger cyanurus) wintering in southwest China
Abstract
Winter, the most challenging season for animals, is usually accompanied
by extremely cold temperatures and limited food resources. Harsh winter
conditions force birds to develop behavioral and physiological
adaptations to reduce mortality. Birds might select for sexual
segregation to reduce conflict between different social hierarchies at
the population level. They can also adjust their body conditioning via
fat reserve to balance the trade-off between starvation and predation at
the individual level. Using mist-netting surveys and bird banding, we
traced 61 orange-flanked bush-robin (Tarsiger cyanurus), an abundant and
easily-observed long-distance migratory bird exhibiting delayed plumage
maturation, to better understand the winter adaptation of these
songbirds. We found that the number of 2yr+ adult males with bright-blue
plumage was significantly lower than the number of males with
olive-brown plumage. However, the sex-ratio was only slightly skewed to
males with olive-brown plumage, suggesting that habitat-type influences
sexual segregation. This robin tends to become heavier and store more
fat over the course of winter, as they can fine-tune their fat reserve
in response to changes in weather (including temperature, humidity, and
snowfall) and food abundance. Interestingly, capturing the birds may
also have a significant positive effect on their fat reserve. Overall,
these results improved our understanding of the flexibility in
adaptation of small passerine birds wintering in a subtropical forest
and provided vision for considering the inevitable influence by
ornithology field methods.