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39
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Introduction
I am an ecologist with a passion for migratory birds and the Arctic. My main research focus is to study the ability of migrants to keep up with Arctic climate warming. I study animals and their food using long-term tracking and reproduction data, field experiments and models.
Currently I am affiliated with the Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ) and a guest researcher at NIOO-KNAW. I am involved with conservation efforts of the Arctic Migratory Bird Initiative (AMBI-CAFF).
Skills and Expertise
Additional affiliations
November 2013 - May 2018
Education
August 2010 - August 2013
August 2006 - June 2010
Publications
Publications (39)
Climate warming challenges animals to advance their timing of reproduction [1], but many animals appear to be unable to advance at the same rate as their food species [2, 3]. As a result, mismatches can arise between the moment of largest food requirements for their offspring and peak food availability [4-6], with important fitness consequences [7]...
Rapid climate warming is driving organisms to advance timing of reproduction with earlier springs, but the rate of advancement shows large variation, even among populations of the same species. In this study, we investigated how the rate of advancement in timing of reproduction with a warming climate varies for barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis) pop...
Climate warming advances the optimal timing of breeding for many animals. For migrants to start breeding earlier, a concurrent advancement of migration is required, including premigratory fueling of energy reserves. We investigate whether barnacle geese are time constrained during premigratory fueling and whether there is potential to advance or sh...
In seasonal environments subject to climate change, organisms typically show phenological changes. As these changes are usually stronger in organisms at lower trophic levels than those at higher trophic levels, mismatches between consumers and their prey may occur during the consumers’ reproduction period. While in some species a trophic mismatch i...
Climate warming in the Arctic has led to warmer and earlier springs, and as a result, many food resources for migratory animals become available earlier in the season, as well as become distributed further northwards. To optimally profit from these resources, migratory animals are expected to arrive earlier in the Arctic, as well as shift their own...
The Russian breeding population of barnacle geese Branta leucopsis has shown a rapid increase in numbers since 1980, which has coincided with a southwest-wards breeding range expansion within the Russian Arctic. Here barnacle geese also started to occupy coastal and marsh land habitats, in which they were not know to nest on their traditional breed...
In the present Anthropocene, wild animals are globally affected by human activity. Consumer fireworks during New Year (NY) are widely distributed in W‐Europe and cause strong disturbances that are known to incur stress responses in animals. We analyzed GPS tracks of 347 wild migratory geese of four species during eight NYs quantifying the effects o...
With rapid climatic changes over the past decades, organisms living in seasonal environments are suggested to increasingly face trophic mismatches: the disruption of synchrony between different trophic levels due to a different phenological response to increasing temperatures. Strong effects of mismatches are especially expected in the Arctic regio...
Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses of the A/Goose/Guangdong/1/1996 lineage (GsGd), which threaten the health of poultry, wildlife and humans, are spreading across Asia, Europe, Africa and North America but are currently absent from South America and Oceania. In December 2021, H5N1 HPAI viruses were detected in poultry and a free-livin...
Wind turbines and power lines can cause bird mortality due to collision or electrocution. The biodiversity impacts of energy infrastructure (EI) can be minimised through effective landscape-scale planning and mitigation. The identification of high-vulnerability areas is urgently needed to assess potential cumulative impacts of EI while supporting t...
Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses of the A/Goose/Guangdong/1/1996 lineage (GsGd), which threaten the health of poultry, wildlife and humans, are spreading across Asia, Europe and Africa, but are currently absent from Oceania and the Americas. In December 2021, H5N1 HPAI viruses were detected in poultry and a free-living gull in St. J...
• Many organisms reproduce in seasonal environments, where selection on timing of reproduction is particularly strong as consumers need to synchronize reproduction with the peaked occurrence of their food. When a consumer species changes its phenology at a slower rate than its resources, this may induce a trophic mismatch, that is, offspring growin...
Our ability to define the population status, migration routes and seasonal distribution of Bean Geese Anser fabalis throughout the annual cycle in East Asia is severely compromised by the presence of two subspecies (Eastern Taiga Bean Goose A. f. middendorffii and Eastern Tundra Bean Goose A. f. serrirostris), which are difficult to differentiate i...
Two of the most fundamental ecological questions about any species relate to where they occur and in what abundance. Here, we combine GPS telemetry data, survey data and expert knowledge for the first time to define two distinct flyways (the East Asian Continental and West Pacific flyways), migration routes and abundance for the Eastern population...
Geese are considered to show high nest-site fidelity throughout their lives. While geese can make short-ranged shifts in nest sites, often following reproductive failure, long-distance shifts are rarely reported. Here we use GPS-tracking to show how a female Barnacle Goose made a 100km shift in nest-site to Kolguev Island, Russia after 9 years of h...
Ontogenetic niche shifts have helped to understand population dynamics. Here we show that ontogenetic niche shifts also offer an explanation, complementary to traditional concepts, as to why certain species show seasonal migration. We describe how demographic processes (survival, reproduction and migration) and associated ecological requirements of...
Two Chinese Spot-billed ducks were observed on a floodplain lake
on the outskirts of the settlement of Khatanga (71°59’07” N 102°30’26” E), southwestern Taimyr, Russia, on 5 August 2019. It is the first record of the species on the Taimyr Peninsula.
Feeding specialization is a common cause of individual variation. Fitness payoffs of specialization vary with environmental conditions, but the underlying behavioral mechanisms are poorly understood. Such mechanistic knowledge, however, is crucial to reliably predict responses of heterogeneous populations to environmental change. We quantified spat...
Breeding output of geese, measured as the proportion of juveniles in autumn or winter flocks, is lower in years with a late onset of spring in some species, but higher in at least one other species. Here we argue that this is because the timing of spring affects different stages of the reproductive cycle differently in different species. Because th...
Migratory birds need considerable energy reserves to fuel long-distance flights to their breeding grounds in spring. To attain sufficient energy deposits before departure, birds require high daily intake rates, which can be reached by utilizing high-quality food. During such periods of high energy demand, animals often track changes in the nutritio...
Variation in the home-range size of nesting animals is thought to be driven by nutritional requirements, food availability, and predation risk of the animals during foraging. Only few studies have considered that the risk of nest predation may also affect home-range size because nests become more difficult to defend as animals move further away. We...
This data is connected to the research paper "Arctic geese tune migration to a warming climate but still suffer from a phenological mismatch". It includes data on migration and reproduction timing of Barnacle Geese in relation to the timing of snow melt and plant phenology, and also reproduction data from Barnacle Geese. Detailed information can be...
Background
Tracking devices have enabled researchers to study unique aspects of behavior in birds. However, it has become clear that attaching these devices to birds often affects their survival and behavior. While most studies only focus on negative effects on return rates, tracking devices can also affect the behavior under study, and it is there...
Since the first studies in the mid-twentieth century, lightweight electronic tracking devices have been increasingly used to study waterfowl movements. With half a century of experience and growing sample sizes, it has become clear that the attachment of a tracking device can affect a bird's behaviour and fitness. This becomes problematic when it i...
A common problem with observational datasets is that not all events of interest may be detected. For example, observing animals in the wild can difficult when animals move, hide, or cannot be closely approached. We consider time series of events recorded in conditions where events are occasionally missed by observers or observational devices. These...
Harness attachments have been used for almost 30 years to equip migratory swans and geese with tracking devices. Harnesses for geese need to be sturdy and have the possibility to be adjusted during deployment to fit individual geese. Here we present a novel harness for attaching tracking devices to migratory geese which fits these requirements. The...
Arctic amplification, the accelerated climate warming in the polar regions, is causing a more rapid advancement of the onset of spring in the Arctic than in temperate regions. Consequently, the arrival of many migratory birds in the Arctic is thought to become increasingly mismatched with the onset of local spring, consequently reducing individual...
During spring migration, herbivorous waterfowl breeding in the Arctic depend on peaks in the supply of nitrogen-rich forage plants, following a “green wave” of grass growth along their flyway to fuel migration and reproduction. The effects of climate warming on forage plant growth are expected to be larger at the Arctic breeding grounds than in tem...
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the abundance and distributionof many central Asian steppe birds have been affected by changes in agricultural landmanagement, such as the abandonment of large areas of cropland and changing grazingpatterns. However, the underlying population processes that drive patterns of abundanceand distribution...
We used 116 years of floral and faunal records from Mandarte Island, British Columbia, Canada, to estimate the indirect effects of humans on plant communities via their effects on the population size of a surface-nesting, colonial seabird, the Glaucous-winged gull ( Larus glaucescens ). Comparing current to historical records revealed 18 extirpatio...
Dataset of vegetation surveys on all islands (2007–2012) and on Mandarte Island (1986 & 2006).
In the first tab (vegetation surveys on all island 2007–2012) we included for every plot the data on number of species and cover of species, separated in exotic and native species groups. We give fraction of litter, rock, moss, lichens and bare ground cov...
Plant species list of Mandarte Island recorded between 1896–2012.
Includes a column for origin of species (native to coast British Columbia or exotic) and the current status on the island in comparison to 1896 (extinct, extant or introduced over the period between 1896 and 2012).
List of islands on which vegetation surveys used in this study have been conducted.
Vegetation surveys have been conducted in 2007 and 2008 (Bennett et al., 2012) and 2012 (this study). Islands are classified as either supporting seabird colonies (‘gull islands’) or not (‘non-gull islands’).
We used 116-years of floral and faunal records from Mandarte Island, British Columbia, Canada, to estimate the indirect effects of humans on plant communities via their effects on the population size of a surface-nesting, colonial seabird, the Glaucous-winged gull ( Larus glaucescens ). Comparing current to historical records revealed 18 extirpatio...
We used 116-years of floral and faunal records from Mandarte Island, British Columbia, Canada, to estimate the indirect effects of humans on plant communities via their effects on the population size of a surface-nesting, colonial seabird, the Glaucous-winged gull ( Larus glaucescens ). Comparing current to historical records revealed 18 extirpatio...
We used observational and experimental approaches to assess the possible functional significance of the often extensive ''pavements'' of livestock dung constructed by female Black Larks (Melanocorypha yeltoniensis) around their nests. These pavements are conspicuous to human observers, suggesting that they may also attract predators. The size of th...