Post-hatch ecology, diet, and first migration of juvenile Alaskan Bar-tailed Godwits

Wader Study
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Abstract

Life stages between hatching and adult recruitment are poorly described for most migratory shorebird species and represent a critical knowledge gap in understanding long-term population dynamics. We conducted a pilot study on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska, to assess the feasibility of following juvenile Bar-tailed Godwits Limosa lapponica baueri from their breeding grounds to their non-breeding grounds in New Zealand and Australia. Radio-tracked broods were highly mobile and moved hundreds to thousands of meters per day. They used low-elevation wetlands with dense shrub cover when younger, and more open, tundra-dominated ridgetops when older. Using DNA metabarcoding analysis of fecal samples, we found that chick diet consisted largely of flying insects (e.g. Tenthredinidae and Ichneumonidae) and small gastropods and appeared to increase in diversity with chick age. We followed one brood to near-fledging (ca. 26 days old) and deployed 5-g satellite transmitters on three chicks. One of these subsequently moved to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, from where it flew 11 days and an estimated 13,391 km to Tasmania, which is the longest non-stop flight recorded for landbirds. These results provide the first information on the ecology of pre- and post-fledging young Bar-tailed Godwits in Alaska, and will inform future efforts to study this important life stage.

Suggested Citation

Conklin, J.R., Ruthrauff, D., Valcu, M., Verkuil, Y.I., Johnson, J.A., and Kempenaers, B., 2026, Post-hatch ecology, diet, and first migration of juvenile Alaskan Bar-tailed Godwits: Wader Study, v. 133, no. 1, p. 12-25, https://doi.org/10.18194/ws.00394.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Post-hatch ecology, diet, and first migration of juvenile Alaskan Bar-tailed Godwits
Series title Wader Study
DOI 10.18194/ws.00394
Volume 133
Issue 1
Publication Date April 01, 2026
Year Published 2026
Language English
Publisher International Wader Study Group
Contributing office(s) Alaska Science Center Ecosystems
Description 14 p.
First page 12
Last page 25
Country Australia, New Zealand, United States
State Alaska
Additional publication details