Migration is one of the most fascinating and dramatic of all animal behaviors. Historically, however, the study of migration has been fragmented, with ornithologists, entomologists, and marine biologists paying little attention to work outside their own fields. This treatment of the subject shows how comparisons across taxa can in fact illuminate migratory life cycles and the relation of migration to other movements; it takes an integrated ecological perspective, focusing on migration as a biological phenomenon. Part One defines migration, gives examples, and places migration in the spectrum of movement behaviors, concluding with a chapter on methods for its study. Part Two focuses on proximate mechanisms, including physiology and morphology (and the constraints associated with them), the interactions between migration and wind and current patterns, and the various orientation and navigation mechanisms by which migrants find their way about. Part Three, on the evolution of migratory life histories, addresses the evolutionary and ecological basis for migration and the roles of migration not only in the lives of organisms, but also in the ecological communities in which they live. Part Four is devoted to a brief consideration of migration and its relation to pest management and conservation. As a major contribution to a vital subject, this work will be valued by all researchers and students in the field of animal behavior, ecology, and zoology.
Author(s): Hugh Dingle
Edition: 1
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 1996
Language: English
Pages: 480
Contents......Page 8
Introduction and Plan of the Book......Page 10
1 A Taxonomy of Movement......Page 16
2 Migration: A Definition......Page 27
3 Patterns in Migratory Journeys......Page 47
4 Methods for Studying Migration......Page 71
5 Migration, Winds, and Currents......Page 102
6 Physiology of Migration......Page 144
7 Biomechanical and Bioenergetic Constraints on Migration......Page 174
8 Orientation and Navigation......Page 206
9 Seasonal Migrations......Page 241
10 Migration to Special Habitats......Page 263
11 Migration Under Ephemeral Conditions......Page 277
12 Behavioral Variability in Migration......Page 300
13 Polymorphisms and Polyphenisms......Page 329
14 Evolutionary Genetics of Migration......Page 360
15 Migration and Pest Management......Page 391
16 Migration and Conservation......Page 402
17 Summing Up and Future Directions......Page 420
References......Page 430
C......Page 478
L......Page 479
S......Page 480
Z......Page 481