When to stay, when to go: trade-offs for southern African arid-zone birds in times of drought

Authors

  • W.R.J. Dean
  • P. Barnard
  • M.D. Anderson

Abstract

Arid environments remind one of the punctuated equilibriumtheory of evolution: they experience long periods of stasis and low productivity, interrupted with episodic rainfall which spurs reproduction and movement. Birds, as highly dispersive organisms, are among the most dramatic indicators of these fluctuations. Here we review birds' two main strategies, residency and nomadism, and the trade-offs faced by individuals in uncertain times. In general, wet years stimulate higher densities of nests (i.e. smaller territories), larger clutch sizes, unseasonal breeding, and at some times of year, higher breeding success. Rainfall above a certain threshold triggers breeding in resident species and an influx of nomadic species which breed and then move on. The environmental cues which trigger nomadism are sometimes poorly understood, but include distant thunderstorms for aquatic species, and perhaps for insectivores. Environmental cues that draw nomadic granivores to areas that have had recent rain are not known.

Author Biographies

  • W.R.J. Dean
    DST/NRF Centre of Excellence at the Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology,
    University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, 7701 South Africa.
  • P. Barnard
    DST/NRF Centre of Excellence at the Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology,
    University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, 7701 South Africa.

    Birds and Environmental Change Partnership, Climate Change and Bio-Adaptation
    Division, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Private Bag X7, Claremont, South
    Africa.
  • M.D. Anderson
    BirdLife South Africa, P.O. Box 515, Randburg 2125, Gauteng, South Africa.
    *Author for correspondence. E-mail: lycium@telkomsa.net

Downloads

Published

2009-12-11

Issue

Section

Review Articles

How to Cite

Dean, W., Barnard, P., & Anderson, M. (2009). When to stay, when to go: trade-offs for southern African arid-zone birds in times of drought. South African Journal of Science, 105(1/2). https://sajs.co.za/article/view/10334
Views
  • Abstract 158
  • PDF 90