Publication:

Variation of fuelling rates among sites, days and individuals in migrating passerine birds.

Date

Date

Date
2001
Journal Article
Published version

Citations

Citation copied

Schaub, M., & Jenni, L. (2001). Variation of fuelling rates among sites, days and individuals in migrating passerine birds. Functional Ecology, 15(5), 584–594. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0269-8463.2001.00568.x

Abstract

Abstract

Abstract

1. The seasonal migration of birds is divided into alternating phases of stopover and flight. The fuel deposition rate at stopover sites is the crucial factor determining overall speed of migration and its success. Therefore, field data about the variation in fuel deposition rates at different levels (among sites, seasons, days, individuals) are essential to explain the observed behavioural reactions to environmental variability and migration strategies. 2. Fuel deposition rates of four species of passerine migrant birds captured at

Metrics

Views

115 since deposited on 2008-02-11
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Additional indexing

Creators (Authors)

  • Schaub, M
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Jenni, L
    affiliation.icon.alt

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Volume

Volume

Volume
15

Number

Number

Number
5

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number
584

Page end

Page end

Page end
594

Item Type

Item Type

Item Type
Journal Article

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Language

Language

Language
English

Publication date

Publication date

Publication date
2001

Date available

Date available

Date available
2008-02-11

Publisher

Publisher

Publisher

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN
0269-8463

OA Status

OA Status

OA Status
Closed

Metrics

Views

115 since deposited on 2008-02-11
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Citations

Citation copied

Schaub, M., & Jenni, L. (2001). Variation of fuelling rates among sites, days and individuals in migrating passerine birds. Functional Ecology, 15(5), 584–594. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0269-8463.2001.00568.x

Closed
Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Permanent URL

Permanent URL

Permanent URL
No files available