Abstract
Patterns of habitat choice in ecological communities are not only influenced by present-day selective forces but also by historical processes, such as the biogeographical history of the lineages they are composed of. Nevertheless, it has been very difficult to test historical factors. The possible tropical origin of long-distance migratory birds provides an opportunity for such a test. If habitat choice of long-distance migrants is inherited from their tropical ancestors then Nearctic long-distance migrants might have acquired their habitat choice from Neotropical forest species and European long-distance migrants from African savannah species. Here we use a macroecological approach to show that this hypothesis can be confirmed. Long-distance migrants in the Nearctic are found in forested habitat types, while those in Europe are found in open ones. In comparison, the habitat choice of residents and short-distance migrants (in genera without long-distance migration) does not differ between the Nearctic and Europe. These results demonstrate that habitat choice in temperate bird communities can be explained by the tropical history of long-distance migrants. Thus, habitat choice seems to be shaped not only by local mechanisms, but also by processes acting on much larger spatial and temporal scales.

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Acknowledgements
We thank J. Adams for maps of vegetation cover and B. Bleher, B. Gaese, N. Lemoine, J. Mey, A. Prinzing, F. Pulido, and H. Wagner for valuable comments on earlier versions of the manuscript. The work was supported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to K.B.-G. (Bo 1221/4–1).
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Böhning-Gaese, K., Oberrath, R. Macroecology of habitat choice in long-distance migratory birds. Oecologia 137, 296–303 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-003-1346-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-003-1346-9


