Introduction
Relative to long-distance migrants, altitudinal migrants have been understudied, perhaps because of a perception that their migrations are less complex and easier to protect. In montane regions many species migrate altitudinally up and down mountain slopes (Stiles, Reference Stiles, Almeda and Pringle1988; Powell & Bjork, Reference Powell and Bjork1995; Burgess & Mlingwa, Reference Burgess and Mlingwa2000; Chaves-Champos et al., Reference Chaves-Campos, Arévalo and Araya2003; Faaborg et al., Reference Faaborg, Holmes, Anders, Bildstein, Dugger and Gauthreaux2010). Although attempts have been made (Laymon, Reference Laymon1989; Cade & Hoffman, Reference Cade and Hoffman1993; Powell & Bjork, Reference Powell and Bjork1994; Chaves-Champos et al., Reference Chaves-Campos, Arévalo and Araya2003; Hess et al., Reference Hess, Leopold, Misajon, Hu and Jeffrey2012), few studies have illustrated patterns of altitudinal migration using telemetry (but see Norbu et al., Reference Norbu, Wikelski, Wilcove, Partecke and Ugyen Tenzin2013).
Montane regions, which cover an estimated 24.3% of land surface area (Kapos et al., Reference Kapos, Rhind, Edwards, Price, Ravilious, Kremsa, Price and Butt2000), are being exposed to climate change (Nogués-Bravo et al., Reference Nogués-Bravo, Araújo, Errea and Martínez-Rica2007) and loss of forest cover (Blyth et al., Reference Blyth, Groombridge, Lysenko, Miles and Newton2002; Pandit et al., Reference Pandit, Sodhi, Koh, Bhaskar and Brook2007), both of which will put mountain species and their migrations at risk (Inouye et al., Reference Inouye, Barr, Armitage and Inouye2000).
In general, animal migrations are undergoing decline (Wilcove & Wikelski, Reference Wilcove and Wikelski2008; Harris et al., Reference Harris, Thirgood, Hopcraft, Cromsigt and Berger2009) as a result of habitat loss and climate change (Both et al., Reference Both, Bouwhuis, Lessells and Visser2006; Møller et al., Reference Møller, Rubolini and Lehikoinen2008). These declines are of concern because migration is important in maintaining ecological processes and shaping ecosystems (Holland et al., Reference Holland, Wikelski and Wilcove2006; Wilcove & Wikelski, Reference Wilcove and Wikelski2008; Bowlin et al., Reference Bowlin, Bisson, Shamoun-Baranes, Reichard, Sapir and Marra2010). However, the conservation of migratory species remains a daunting task, given the complexity of the phenomenon and the geographical scale at which it occurs (Moore et al., Reference Moore, Gauthreaux, Kerlinger, Simons, Martin and Finch1995; Wilcove, Reference Wilcove2008; Faaborg et al., Reference Faaborg, Holmes, Anders, Bildstein, Dugger and Gauthreaux2010).
In comparison to long-distance migrants, the conservation of altitudinal migrants may be perceived to be relatively easier given their occurrence over a smaller geographical area. This may not necessarily be the case, however. For example, telemetry studies (Powell & Bjork, Reference Powell and Bjork1994, Reference Powell and Bjork1995, Reference Powell and Bjork2004) have shown that habitat types required by two altitudinally migrating species, the resplendent quetzal Pharomachrus mocinno and three-wattled bellbird Procnias tricarunculata, were not included within Costa Rica's protected area system. To ensure the protection of altitudinal migrants, the incorporation of all habitat types within reserve systems has been recommended as a principle of effective reserve design (Powell & Bjork, Reference Powell and Bjork1994, Reference Powell and Bjork1995, Reference Powell and Bjork2004).
Establishment of protected areas (Terborgh et al., Reference Terborgh, van Schaik, Davenport and Rao2002; Brooks et al., Reference Brooks, Bakarr, Boucher, Da Fonseca, Hilton-Taylor and Hoekstra2004; Cantú-Salazar et al., Reference Cantú-Salazar, Orme, Rasmussen, Blackburn and Gaston2013) and biological corridors (Roever et al., Reference Roever, van Aarde and Leggett2013) has become one of the key strategies to protect biodiversity. However, the adequacy and effectiveness of protected areas and corridors have been questioned (Hobbs, Reference Hobbs1992; Beier & Noss, Reference Beier and Noss1998; Ervin, Reference Ervin2003), particularly regarding the conservation of migratory species (Moore et al., Reference Moore, Gauthreaux, Kerlinger, Simons, Martin and Finch1995; Thirgood et al., Reference Thirgood, Mosser, Tham, Hopcraft, Mwangomo and Mlengeya2004; Martin et al., Reference Martin, Chadès, Arcese, Marra, Possingham and Norris2007); for example, wildlife movement data have been used in only a few instances to influence corridor design (Zeller et al., Reference Zeller, McGarigal and Whiteley2012).
With 111 protected areas, the network of protected areas in the Himalayas covers an estimated 741,706 km2 (Chettri et al., Reference Chettri, Shakya, Thapa and Sharma2008). Despite this extensive coverage we are not aware of any telemetry-based study of altitudinal migrants to assess the effectiveness of protected areas in the Himalayas. Given that the Himalayas are undergoing habitat loss (Pandit et al., Reference Pandit, Sodhi, Koh, Bhaskar and Brook2007) and climate change (Shrestha et al., Reference Shrestha, Gautam and Bawa2012), and noting that many of the birds in the Himalayas are altitudinal migrants (Inskipp et al., Reference Inskipp, Inskipp and Grimmet1999; Grimmet et al., Reference Grimmet, Inskipp and Inskipp2000; BirdLife International, 2015), data are needed to test the adequacy of conservation landscapes in protecting altitudinally migrating species.
We used global positioning system (GPS)/accelerometer telemetry to track the seasonal migration of the satyr tragopan Tragopan satyra, a pheasant endemic to the central and eastern Himalayas of Bhutan, India and Nepal. The species (hereafter referred to as the tragopan) is categorized as Near Threatened on the IUCN Red List (BirdLife International, 2012a) and listed on Appendix III of CITES (2015). Only an estimated 20,000 individuals (c. 6,000–15,000 mature adults) are believed to be extant in the wild (BirdLife International, 2012b). The tragopan has been shown to be a partial altitudinal migrant (Norbu et al., Reference Norbu, Wikelski, Wilcove, Partecke and Ugyen Tenzin2013). Here, we assess the adequacy of a protected area in Bhutan to provide protection for an altitudinal migrant, by examining the migration mode, patterns and habitat requirements of the tragopan.
Study area
We studied the tragopan in Thrumshingla National Park, a 905 km2 protected area in central Bhutan (Fig. 1), at 1,500–4,500 m elevation. Mean daily temperature is −8–25°C. The area has four distinct seasons, with most rainfall occurring during May–August as part of the Asian monsoons. The study area is mostly covered by conifer forests dominated by Bhutan fir Abies densa, with rhododendron understorey at higher elevations (> 3,000 m) transitioning to mixed conifer forests (2,400–3,000 m) comprising Sikkim spruce Picea spinulosa, Himalayan hemlock Tsuga dumosa and Sikkim larch Larix griffithii. Below 2,400 m conifer forests give way to conifer–broadleaved mixed forests and to cool broadleaved forests of oak Quercus glauca and Quercus lamellosa. There are also a few patches of open grazing areas that are used by nomadic cattle herders.
Methods
Trapping
We trapped tragopans during June–October in 2009, 2010 and 2011 using neck noose traps laid along ridges known to be used by tragopans, which we barricaded with bamboo and shrubs. We flushed tragopans towards traps during early mornings and evenings. In 2009, when the birds were trapped for the first time, all captured individuals were released immediately after GPS tags were attached, to reduce the risk of any handling-related fatalities. Tragopans captured in 2010 and 2011 were weighed (to the nearest g) and their tarsus length (mm) and beak size (mm) were measured. All trapping was approved by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forests in Bhutan.
GPS/accelerometer tags and data acquisition
We used GPS/accelerometer tags (e-obs, Munich, Germany) to record the location and activity of tagged tragopans. The recorded data (i.e. location, elevation, date, time and acceleration) were downloaded remotely with a hand-held base station after each individual was relocated via its tag's VHF radio pulse. To help locate tagged birds the tags were programmed to ping every 2 seconds for 2 hours every day. Tags with harnesses weighed 45 g. Except for the smallest individual, which weighed 910 g, all tagged tragopans weighed > 1 kg, with the largest weighing 1.8 kg; the mean weight of 28 individuals was 1.46 kg. At the mean weight, tags constituted 3% of the body weight; this is within the acceptable limit of 5% (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins2004). Tags deployed in 2009 were programmed to record a GPS reading every 2 hours during 04.00–22.00. Given battery power constraints, in 2010 tags were programmed to record only two GPS readings per day, at 06.00 and 14.00, and in 2011 they recorded three readings per day, at 08.00, 14.00 and 20.00. To optimize battery performance, tags were programmed with a give-up time of 2 minutes, after which the tag would cease trying to obtain a GPS reading for a particular location.
Distance, duration and direction of migration
We categorized all individuals that showed distinct non-overlapping summer and winter ranges (i.e. individuals that stayed > 3 months at winter ranges) as migrants and the remainder as residents. Using the Show Elevation Profile tool in Google Earth v. 5.2 (Google Inc., Mountain View, USA) we measured migration distance as the distance between the location on the day when migration was initiated and the first location on the day when migration was terminated. We ascertained the direction of migration between summer and winter habitat using the Ruler tool in Google Earth.
Habitat use patterns
For all individuals we overlaid GPS fixes on a land-cover map produced by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forests (2011). We counted total fixes for all individuals in various land-cover types across months. To test whether habitat preferences changed over seasons, we fitted generalized linear models in R v. 3.0.2 (R Development Core Team, 2014) to predict the proportion of habitats used (as indicated by the total GPS fixes within a habitat in each month) across months during September–April. For every GPS point recorded during the winter period (December–February) we extracted the aspect (in degrees) of the given location from a digital elevation model at a spatial resolution of 30 x 30 m2. For each individual, using the Rayleigh statistic at a significance level of 0.05, we assessed whether the aspect data were distributed uniformly or whether the individual showed a preference for a particular aspect. For individuals with a significant preference for a certain aspect, we calculated the mean aspect for each individual and calculated summary statistics separately for two groups: migrants and residents. We used Oriana v. 4.02 (Kovach Computing Services, Anglesey, UK) for all circular statistics.
Quantifying bouts of flying/running, walking and resting
We used accelerometer data (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Shepard and Liebsch2007; Brown et al., Reference Brown, Kays, Wikelski, Wilson and Klimley2013) to quantify bouts of flying/running, walking and resting. Acceleration data were obtained for the vertical z-axis (up-and-down axis) continuously for 24 hours every day from tag initiation to the last date of tag download. Acceleration data consisted of 36 raw acceleration values within every 2-minute interval (bout). We calculated differences between successive raw observations and obtained the variances of these differences for each 2-minute bout. We then used the variances to categorize each 2-minute bout into one of three categories of activity: flight/running, walking/foraging or resting. We categorized all variances < 125 as resting, 125–1,500 as walking/foraging, and > 1,500 as flying/running. We could not separate flying and running because the activity signatures for the two were difficult to distinguish. We checked the accuracy of our categorization by cross checking with categorizations obtained using Acceleration Viewer (Movebank, Max Planck Institute of Ornithology, Munich, Germany). To calibrate activity signatures for the software we observed a tagged domestic chicken Gallus gallus for 2 days and recorded the times when it walked, ran, flew and rested. We then inspected its activity patterns in Acceleration Viewer.
Results
We obtained movement data for 24 individuals over 3 years (2009–2011). Fourteen (nine females and five males) migrated and 10 (two females and eight males) did not. Of the 14 migrants, we obtained return migration data for only 4 females and 1 male (Table 1).
Migration patterns, distance and duration
Three distinct patterns of migration were recorded: seven individuals (five females and two males) crossed multiple mountains between summer breeding and winter non-breeding grounds; five individuals (three females and two males) descended longitudinally (i.e. parallel to mountain slopes) to winter grounds; and two individuals (one female and one male) climbed to higher elevations during winter. The birds traversed a mean distance of 6.68 ± 95% CI 2.11 km between summer and wintering grounds, in 11.07 ± 95% CI 5 days. Individuals crossing multiple mountains migrated further than individuals descending longitudinally (n = 12, t = 3.815, P = 0.003). However, there were no significant differences in the number of migration days between those two categories (n = 12, t = 0.788, P = 0.449). Given that only two individuals climbed to higher elevations in winter, we excluded them from the analyses of migratory distances and days travelled. Females traversed a mean distance of 6.91 ± 95% CI 3.16 km, migrating preferentially in a south-easterly direction, with a mean bearing of 160.62° (n = 9; Rayleigh test, P = 0.012), whereas males migrated in random directions (n = 5; Rayleigh test, P = 0.42), covering a mean distance of 6.87 ± 95% CI 3.71 km. All migrants remained within the boundaries of Thrumshingla National Park (Fig. 2a). Of the 14 migrants, seven crossed the highway once and two crossed it at two locations during their migration.
Mode of migration
Tragopan migration is not a single-flight event. The birds covered the migratory distance by walking, interspersed with short bouts of running/flight. When the migration spread over multiple days and involved crossing multiple mountains, the birds stopped to rest on mountain slopes (Supplementary Fig. S1). For all migrants throughout the migratory period bouts of running/flight (median = 13.16) were significantly less frequent than bouts of walking (median = 182.36). All bouts of running/flight were singular events lasting < 2 minutes. Resting bouts (median = 520.30) were in turn significantly more frequent than both walking and flight/running bouts (Kruskal–Wallis ANOVA: H = 36.468, P < 0.001; Tukey test: rest vs flight, q = 8.54, P < 0.05; rest vs walk, q = 4.27, P < 0.05; walk vs flight, q = 4.27, P < 0.05).
Habitats used
For 20 individuals we obtained complete data for the winter months of December, January and February, and for eight individuals we obtained complete data for May, June and July. Migratory individuals used all forest types (fir, mixed conifer and cool broadleaved; Figs 2a & 3) in the study area (Fig. 1). Over an 8-month period (September–April) we identified a significant change in the pattern of habitat use (generalized linear model; for cool broadleaved forest: adjusted R2 = 0.7866, P = 0.009; for mixed conifer forests: adjusted R2 = 0.7866, P = 0.009), with migrants using cool broadleaved forests more frequently, switching from high-elevation fir and mixed conifer forests during winter (November–February). Nevertheless, the tragopans did not completely abandon mixed-conifer forests during winter (χ2 test: df = 2, P = 0.8781), with residents and some migrants still continuing to inhabit these forests. Five of 10 residents remained only within mixed-conifer forests throughout the year, two remained only within cool broadleaved forests, two used both mixed conifer and cool broadleaved forests, and one used a mix of mixed conifer, conifer–broadleaved and cool broadleaved forest (Fig. 2b).
Selection of aspect
Residents preferred south-west facing slopes (n = 12; Rayleigh test, P = 0.016) at a mean aspect (mean vector, μ) of 235.47° during winter (December–February). During the same period migrants preferred south-east facing slopes (n = 12; Rayleigh test, P = 0.003) at a mean aspect of 122.062° (Fig. 4). During summer (May–July) both migrants and residents preferred to stay on south-west facing slopes (n = 8 (6 sedentary and 2 migrants); Rayleigh test, P = 0.002; Fig. 4).
Discussion
In general, altitudinal migrants have been poorly studied, and this is especially the case in the Himalayas. Our study of the satyr tragopan in Bhutan yielded new information that will inform the conservation of this species and possibly other terrestrial, forest-dependent altitudinal migrants, particularly Galliformes. Whereas some of the individuals in our study population simply moved down a mountain for the winter, others chose to cross multiple mountains to reach a suitable winter range. A simplistic conservation plan focused on protecting habitats along elevational bands on a given mountain slope would not protect those individuals travelling between and across mountains. Moreover, tragopans migrate predominantly by walking, interspersed with short bouts of running or flight through the forest. This raises the possibility that certain forms of land-use change could create barriers to the species’ migration, and underscores the need to protect contiguous tracts of suitable habitat.
The conservation requirements for birds that migrate primarily by walking may be more similar to those of migrating ungulates than to birds that migrate by flying. As is the case with migratory ungulates (Bolger et al., Reference Bolger, Newmark, Morrison and Doak2008), barriers and land-use changes along migratory routes can be detrimental to birds such as tragopans. Unlike ungulates (Williamson & Williamson, Reference Williamson and Williamson1984; Ben-Shahar, Reference Ben-Shahar1993; Mwangi, Reference Mwangi1998), however, the tragopan's ability to fly even short distances may render it less susceptible to minor barriers such as fences.
Migratory tragopans used all forest types across their annual cycles, using mostly high-elevation fir and mixed conifer forests in summer and cool broadleaved forests in winter. Residents and a few migrants continued to use mixed conifer forests during winter, thus it is important to protect contiguous tracts of all habitat types across all seasons. Similar observations were made by Powell & Bjork (Reference Powell and Bjork1995, Reference Powell and Bjork2004) for altitudinally migrating birds in Costa Rica.
Changes in habitat use from summer to winter were not a simple transition to lower-elevation forests (and vice-versa during spring). Our results reveal a complex pattern whereby individuals also migrated within a single habitat type (i.e. from higher-elevation mixed conifer forest to lower-elevation mixed conifer forest). Two individuals migrated to lower elevations within a forest transition complex consisting of patches of mixed conifer and cool broadleaved forests, whereas one female and one male migrated to higher-elevation fir forests from mixed-conifer forests during winter. In addition to supporting the need to protect forest habitats with adequate representation of all habitat types, our data also highlight the importance of individual differences and choice (Bolnick et al., Reference Bolnick, Svanbäck, Fordyce, Yang, Davis, Hulsey and Forister2003) in shaping migratory patterns.
In addition to protecting all habitat types, we propose an additional requirement for the effective conservation of altitudinally migrating species within montane environments: conservation of aspect diversity. Migratory tragopans differ from their sedentary counterparts in their choice of aspect during winter, with migrants switching from south-east to south-west facing slopes while residents continue to reside on south-east facing slopes. We propose that protected areas, in addition to having representative habitat types, should also have adequate representation of all aspects within a landscape. Protecting a diversity of aspects could also benefit the conservation of a variety of other altitudinal migrants (Poole et al., Reference Poole, Stuart-Smith and Teske2009; Zeng et al., Reference Zeng, Beck and Wang2010).
Over an annual cycle we observed that north-west facing slopes were not preferred by any of the individuals, resident or migratory, that we tracked. Within Thrumshingla National Park almost 11% (c. 104 km2) of the total area has a north-west aspect, and studies targeted at estimating the tragopan population size in the Park should perhaps consider excluding north-west facing slopes as suitable habitats. However, our sample size is small and we suggest that further study of aspect preference should be conducted to verify our assertion. Nonetheless, across protected areas in montane regions, if altitudinal migrants exhibit such preferences, population estimates may need to be revised.
Studies have shown continuing loss of forest cover across many regions (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Potapov, Moore, Hancher, Turubanova and Tyukavina2013). However, we remain optimistic that migrants can persist in countries such as Bhutan where protected areas have retained their forests (Thrumshingla National Park has an estimated 95% forest cover) and large-scale commercial harvesting of forest within protected areas is not permitted. All the migrants we tracked remained within the boundaries of the Park, and their migratory tracks covered c. one third of the Park's area. It may therefore be necessary to protect large areas for the sake of relatively few migrants, and in this regard a detailed assessment of park sizes and migrant distribution across montane regions would be of value.
We hypothesize that the movement of migrants to areas outside the Park boundaries may be restricted by human settlements surrounding the Park. Additional studies are necessary to determine the types and intensities of land uses that tragopans can tolerate. Several migrants crossed the national highway at multiple locations, suggesting that the highway is not currently a barrier to tragopan migration. This could be because highways in Bhutan are narrow (mean width < 3 m). Increases in traffic intensity and highway width should therefore be monitored to track potential risks for migrants.
Our findings are relevant to discussions regarding the role of habitat corridors in protecting biodiversity. Given ongoing deforestation (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Potapov, Moore, Hancher, Turubanova and Tyukavina2013) and other land-use changes that impede migration, the concept of connecting protected areas with habitat corridors has gained prominence. However, much remains to be learned regarding the effectiveness of such corridors (Hobbs, Reference Hobbs1992; Beier & Noss, Reference Beier and Noss1998). Our finding that female tragopans tend to migrate in a south-easterly direction whereas males have no particular orientation suggests that corridors are likely to be no more than partially successful in protecting tragopan migrations. For male tragopans in particular, corridors may prove to be a poor substitute for large, continuous blocks of forest.
Given that most montane bird species of Bhutan and the Himalayas are altitudinal migrants, and given the complex patterns of migration and habitat use exhibited by a single species, the satyr tragopan, it seems clear that more research on altitudinal migrants is needed to understand fully what will be required to ensure their future in an era of widespread land-use and climate change.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to the International Max Planck Research School for Organismal Biology and the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Radolfzell, for funding this work.
Biographical sketches
Nawang Norbu uses science and policy to inform conservation and management of forests. Ugyen is interested in biodiversity assessment, and management of threatened wildlife species. Martin Wikelski studies global wildlife migration systems and their impacts on the environment and society. David Wilcove combines research in ecology and the social sciences for the protection of global biodiversity and migratory phenomena.