Banner image placeholder
Banner image
Site avatar

Sara Ryding

Evolutionary ecologist

Extreme site fidelity in long-distance migratory shorebirds in Australia and potential implications for conservation.


Journal article


T. A. Ross, R. Atkinson, M. Christie, D. I. Rogers, C. J. Hassell, R. Jessop, J. T. Coleman, T. Piersma, Sara Ryding, A. Spence, M. Klaassen
Conservation Biology, 2026

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Ross, T. A., Atkinson, R., Christie, M., Rogers, D. I., Hassell, C. J., Jessop, R., … Klaassen, M. (2026). Extreme site fidelity in long-distance migratory shorebirds in Australia and potential implications for conservation. Conservation Biology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Ross, T. A., R. Atkinson, M. Christie, D. I. Rogers, C. J. Hassell, R. Jessop, J. T. Coleman, et al. “Extreme Site Fidelity in Long-Distance Migratory Shorebirds in Australia and Potential Implications for Conservation.” Conservation Biology (2026).


MLA   Click to copy
Ross, T. A., et al. “Extreme Site Fidelity in Long-Distance Migratory Shorebirds in Australia and Potential Implications for Conservation.” Conservation Biology, 2026.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{t2026a,
  title = {Extreme site fidelity in long-distance migratory shorebirds in Australia and potential implications for conservation.},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Conservation Biology},
  author = {Ross, T. A. and Atkinson, R. and Christie, M. and Rogers, D. I. and Hassell, C. J. and Jessop, R. and Coleman, J. T. and Piersma, T. and Ryding, Sara and Spence, A. and Klaassen, M.}
}

Abstract

Site fidelity is the tendency for animals to repeatedly return to the same locations, either within or between years. Site fidelity enables animals to utilize knowledge of previously visited locations, including assessments of seasonal variations in health and mortality risks (e.g., predation), resource availability, and social benefits such as pairing with previous mates. However, rigidly enacted site fidelity may come with fitness costs in times of rapid habitat change. One group believed to exhibit site fidelity is migratory shorebirds (families Charadriidae and Scolopacidae). Shorebirds that migrate annually via the East Asian-Australasian Flyway have experienced rapid population declines due to habitat loss in Asia. Although high site fidelity may influence these declines under a global change scenario, only limited, species-specific analyses of site fidelity have been previously conducted. Our study used an extensive dataset of 636,167 records of over 84,000 banded individual shorebirds from 1976 to 2025 to present an overview of site fidelity for 12 migratory shorebird species during their nonbreeding season in Australia. We found overall site fidelity of >95% across 10 out of 12 species, with the only exceptions being red knot (Calidris canutus) and sanderling (Calidris alba), with movements often limited to sections of coastline less than 20 km long. Juvenile and immature birds were usually less site faithful than adults. The high site fidelities of most species suggest that local site knowledge is of considerable importance and that individuals forced to relocate to alternative sites will likely incur a cost. Our findings also imply that habitat loss may have immediate population-level consequences through reduced fitness of displaced birds.


Share

Translate to