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Great Circle Hypotheis
Magnetoclinic Hypothesis
Magnetic-Latitude Hypothesis
Compass Bearings Hypothesis
Suns' Azimuth Hypothesis
Expansion-Contraction Hypothesis
Always Advance Hypothesis
Never Go Back Hypothesis
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Analyses of Pooled Field Data:
Descriptive Statistics |
Descriptive circular statistics of pooled directional data for
the 1978, 1979, and 1981 Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) migrations in
Southern Ontario.
¦ Up
¦ Tables: I, II, III,
IV, V, VI, VII, VIII a, VIII b, IX, X, XI, XII ¦
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 Table
III*
Mean Bearings of straight-flying, migrating, Danaus plexippus for eight wind
conditions
Directional data were grouped according to wind direction at the time of the observation.
The analysis was restricted to the subgroup of individuals for each wind
condition that were flying straight.
|
Wind |
N |
Mean Bearing |
r |
A.D. |
95% C.I. |
|
North |
21 |
196° (SSW) |
0.93*** |
±21° |
±10° |
Northeast |
21 |
224° (SW) |
0.79*** |
±37° |
±18° |
East |
81 |
235° (SW) |
0.89*** |
±27° |
±5°
|
Southeast |
86 |
247° (WSW) |
0.90*** |
±26° |
±5°
|
South |
10
|
219° (SW) |
0.73*** |
±42° |
±33° |
Southwest |
30
|
156° (SSE) |
0.35* |
±65° |
±45° |
West |
11
|
175° (S) |
0.55* |
±54° |
±48° |
Northwest |
58 |
164° (SSE) |
0.77*** |
±39° |
±11° |
Population |
318 |
223° (SW) |
0.63*** |
±49° |
±7° |
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* Adapted from Gibo, D. L., 1986, 1990
Definitions of abbreviations and symbols: N = number in sample,
SSW = South-Southwest, SW = Southwest, WSW = West-Southwest, etc., r = length of
mean vector, A.D. = Angular deviation, and C.I. = Confidence Intervals.
Asterisks indicate significance level for Rayleigh tests (* = P< 0.05, ** =
P< 0.01, **= P < 0.01, and *** = P< 0.001) .
Comments
- The significance level of the Rayleigh test for N, NE, E, SE, S, and NW winds
means that the probability that the population (e.g. all monarch
butterflies flying straight in North winds in southern Ontario during late summer and
fall) from which the sample (i.e. 21 vanishing bearings of monarch butterflies
that I observed for North winds) was taken has no directional bias (i.e. true
vanishing bearings are randomly distributed in the population ) is less than one in a
thousand. In other words, the probability is less than one in a thousand
that the directional bias of my samples of monarchs were simply runs of (good? bad?) luck.
- The above argument applies to the significance levels for the Rayleigh test of
the directional data for monarch butterflies flying in South or Southwest winds, except
that the results are not as encouraging. Because P is less than 0.05, but
greater than 0.01, the probability that the population in southern Ontario is actually
flying about in random directions may be a high as about 1 in 20. Therefore,
we are less confident that the results for South winds and Southwest winds. The
very high value for the Confidence Intervals for South winds and Southwest winds are
another reason to be skeptical of the results. We need to increase sample size and
see if this reduces the P value and the Confidence Intervals, before we accept that the
results for S winds and SW winds are representative of the flight tactics of the
butterflies in these wind conditions.
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