2009
DOI: 10.5253/078.097.0302
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Extended Primary Moult as an Adaptation of Adult Wood SandpipersTringa glareolato Their Freshwater Habitats in Southern Africa

Abstract: Extended primary moult as an adaptation of adult Wood Sandpipers Tringa glareola to their freshwater habitats in southern Africa. Ardea 97(3): 271-280.Migrant waders using freshwater habitats are hypothesized to have slower primary moult than waders using coastal habitats. We chose the Wood Sandpiper Tringa glareola as a representative species using the freshwater habitats and compare its moult pattern with a range of fresh-water and coastal wader species to test the habitat hypothesis. Only fragmentary descri… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Birds were aged by their plumage (Prater et al 1977); immatures and subadults could be distinguished from adults until c. 18 months of age by retained juvenile-type inner median coverts or by the contrast between two generations of primaries (Prater et al 1977;M.R., unpublished data). This study analyses the primary moult of those aged as immatures; the primary moult of adults was described by Remisiewicz et al (2009).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Birds were aged by their plumage (Prater et al 1977); immatures and subadults could be distinguished from adults until c. 18 months of age by retained juvenile-type inner median coverts or by the contrast between two generations of primaries (Prater et al 1977;M.R., unpublished data). This study analyses the primary moult of those aged as immatures; the primary moult of adults was described by Remisiewicz et al (2009).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This transformation requires the relative masses of primary feathers to be known; we used the masses determined by Remisiewicz et al (2009), calculated as described by Summers (1980), Summers et al (1983) and Underhill and Joubert (1995). Assuming that primary feather tissue is deposited at a continuous rate, this provided the moult index required by the Underhill-Zucchini (Underhill and Zucchini 1988) model.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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