Latest News across the RIN

Dr Nick Wards talk in November
07/08/2010

TRINITY HOUSE : A History of Aids to Navigation and Modernisation

FAIRWAY Spring 2010 edition
22/05/2010

The latest edition of the Small Craft Groups newsletter with all the latest news and important navigation commentary.

Garmin chart cards recalled due to ERRORS
19/05/2010

Garmin has recalled the 2009 Bluechart g2 and g2 visionData cards. The web attachments will show you the Garmin web page where FAQ's ...more

7th International Conference on How Animals Navigate
31/03/2010

7th International Conference on How Animals Navigate

Change of date for Seagrass talk
06/09/2010

The UK Hydrographic Society have changed the date of this event to Tuesday 7th September. See listing in Events for full details.

Magnetic Orientation in Migratory Songbirds
03/09/2010

Magnetic Orientation in Migratory Songbirds

The evolution of migration in a seasonal environment

Migration map.jpg

The evolution of migration in a seasonal environment

Despite the fact that migration occurs in a wide variety of taxa worldwide, little is known about the conditions under which migration is expected to evolve from an ancestral resident population. We develop a model that focuses on ecological factors affecting the evolution of migration in a seasonal environment within a genetically explicit framework. We model the evolution of migration for two common types of migration: "shared breeding" where migrants share a breeding ground with residents and migrate to a separate non-breeding area, versus "shared non-breeding", where migrants share a non-breeding ground with residents and migrate to a separate breeding area. Ecologically, migration is more easily established in the shared-breeding case versus the shared-non-breeding case. Genetically, the additive effect of a migratory allele affects its establishment more in the shared-non-breeding case versus the shared-breeding case, whereas the dominance effect of the allele affects its establishment more in the shared-breeding case versus the shared-non-breeding case. Generally, migratory alleles can invade even when residents are competitively superior to migrants during the shared season. Partial migration occurs when the population is polymorphic for migratory and non-migratory alleles, and is dependent upon which season is shared and the additive and dominance behaviour of the migratory allele
Griswold, C. K., Taylor, C. M., Norris, D. R. 2010 Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 277, 2711-2720. Griswold1 2010