Dear all, Please see abstract (below) of new our paper now "in press" with 
Ecology: Rebecca Scott, Robert Marsh, and Graeme Hays In press. Ontogeny of 
long distance migration. Ecology.http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/13-2164.1
Abstract: The movements of some long-distance migrants are driven by innate 
compass headings that they follow on their first migrations (e.g., some birds 
and insects), whilst the movements of other first time migrants are learnt by 
following more experienced conspecifics (e.g., baleen whales). However, the 
overall roles of innate, learnt and social behaviors in driving migration goals 
in many taxa are poorly understood. To look for evidence of whether migration 
routes are innate or learnt for sea turtles, here for 42 sites around the World 
we compare the migration routes of > 400 satellite adults of multiple species 
of sea turtle with c.45,000 Lagrangian hatchling turtle drift scenarios. In so 
doing, we show that the migration routes of adult turtles are strongly related 
to hatchling drift patterns, implying that adult migration goals are learnt 
through their past experiences dispersing with ocean currents. The diverse 
migration destinations of adults consistently reflected the diversity in sites 
they would have encountered as drifting hatchlings. Our findings reveal how a 
simple mechanism, juvenile passive drift, can explain the ontogeny of some of 
the longest migrations in the animal kingdom and ensure that adults find 
suitable foraging sites.
Please note: supplementary material will not be available until the article has 
gone through the copy-editing process and appears "in print", Kind regards and 
please let me know if you would like a copy of the "pre-print", Rebecca Scott
-------------------------
Dr Rebecca Scott 
GEOMAR|Helmholtz Center for Ocean Research Kiel
Düsternbrooker Weg 20
24105 Kiel,
Germany
+49 (0)431 600 4569
http://www.geomar.de/en/mitarbeiter/fb3/ev/rscott/                              
          
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