BIRD MIGRATORY MOVEMENTS AND THEIR POSSIBLE IMPACT ON AVIAN INFLUENZA AND WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADING
Apstrakt
Birds, as mobile organisms, do not know about political borders. Moving from
north to south and vice versa, each year birds undertake exhausting seasonal
migrations, that are worthy of admiration. During migration, birds are using
energy reserves stored in the form of fat deposits that are used as fuel. For many
species continuous flying is impossible, so they need to renew their energy
before continuing their journey. There are several methods used in the study of
bird migration their migratory routes, but the mostly used is ringing, a basic
scientific method. The ringing is based on individual bird marking, with an
aluminium leg ring. Recoveries of ringed birds provide numerous data such as
the beginning and ending of migration, migration routes, length of migration,
productivity, survival or mortality rate. Birds are also good indicators for
monitoring changes in the environment induced by human activities and they
give us insight into the speed of species adaptation in ...response to new climate
change. Tracking of marked bird individuals, through space and time, help us to
understand the ways of spread and transmission of various diseases.In this sense
Ringing schemes are an important tool for studying the characteristics and
monitoring of zoonotic epidemics.
Ključne reči:
bird migration / ringing / recoveries / monitoring / diseases transmissionIzvor:
International Symposium “Avian influenza and West Nile virus – global treats for emerging and re-emerging diseases”, 2022, 187-Izdavač:
- Scientific Veterinary Institute „Novi Sad“, Novi Sad, Serbia
Institucija/grupa
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanjaTY - CONF AU - Stanković, Daliborka AU - Raković, Marko AU - Paunović, Milan PY - 2022 UR - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1682 AB - Birds, as mobile organisms, do not know about political borders. Moving from north to south and vice versa, each year birds undertake exhausting seasonal migrations, that are worthy of admiration. During migration, birds are using energy reserves stored in the form of fat deposits that are used as fuel. For many species continuous flying is impossible, so they need to renew their energy before continuing their journey. There are several methods used in the study of bird migration their migratory routes, but the mostly used is ringing, a basic scientific method. The ringing is based on individual bird marking, with an aluminium leg ring. Recoveries of ringed birds provide numerous data such as the beginning and ending of migration, migration routes, length of migration, productivity, survival or mortality rate. Birds are also good indicators for monitoring changes in the environment induced by human activities and they give us insight into the speed of species adaptation in response to new climate change. Tracking of marked bird individuals, through space and time, help us to understand the ways of spread and transmission of various diseases.In this sense Ringing schemes are an important tool for studying the characteristics and monitoring of zoonotic epidemics. PB - Scientific Veterinary Institute „Novi Sad“, Novi Sad, Serbia C3 - International Symposium “Avian influenza and West Nile virus – global treats for emerging and re-emerging diseases” T1 - BIRD MIGRATORY MOVEMENTS AND THEIR POSSIBLE IMPACT ON AVIAN INFLUENZA AND WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADING SP - 187 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1682 ER -
@conference{ author = "Stanković, Daliborka and Raković, Marko and Paunović, Milan", year = "2022", abstract = "Birds, as mobile organisms, do not know about political borders. Moving from north to south and vice versa, each year birds undertake exhausting seasonal migrations, that are worthy of admiration. During migration, birds are using energy reserves stored in the form of fat deposits that are used as fuel. For many species continuous flying is impossible, so they need to renew their energy before continuing their journey. There are several methods used in the study of bird migration their migratory routes, but the mostly used is ringing, a basic scientific method. The ringing is based on individual bird marking, with an aluminium leg ring. Recoveries of ringed birds provide numerous data such as the beginning and ending of migration, migration routes, length of migration, productivity, survival or mortality rate. Birds are also good indicators for monitoring changes in the environment induced by human activities and they give us insight into the speed of species adaptation in response to new climate change. Tracking of marked bird individuals, through space and time, help us to understand the ways of spread and transmission of various diseases.In this sense Ringing schemes are an important tool for studying the characteristics and monitoring of zoonotic epidemics.", publisher = "Scientific Veterinary Institute „Novi Sad“, Novi Sad, Serbia", journal = "International Symposium “Avian influenza and West Nile virus – global treats for emerging and re-emerging diseases”", title = "BIRD MIGRATORY MOVEMENTS AND THEIR POSSIBLE IMPACT ON AVIAN INFLUENZA AND WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADING", pages = "187", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1682" }
Stanković, D., Raković, M.,& Paunović, M.. (2022). BIRD MIGRATORY MOVEMENTS AND THEIR POSSIBLE IMPACT ON AVIAN INFLUENZA AND WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADING. in International Symposium “Avian influenza and West Nile virus – global treats for emerging and re-emerging diseases” Scientific Veterinary Institute „Novi Sad“, Novi Sad, Serbia., 187. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1682
Stanković D, Raković M, Paunović M. BIRD MIGRATORY MOVEMENTS AND THEIR POSSIBLE IMPACT ON AVIAN INFLUENZA AND WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADING. in International Symposium “Avian influenza and West Nile virus – global treats for emerging and re-emerging diseases”. 2022;:187. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1682 .
Stanković, Daliborka, Raković, Marko, Paunović, Milan, "BIRD MIGRATORY MOVEMENTS AND THEIR POSSIBLE IMPACT ON AVIAN INFLUENZA AND WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADING" in International Symposium “Avian influenza and West Nile virus – global treats for emerging and re-emerging diseases” (2022):187, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1682 .