66 research outputs found
Great tit (Parus major) breeding in fire-prone oak woods: differential effects of post-fire conditions on reproductive stages
Wildfires negatively affect the overall reproductive success of several woodland avian species, but there is
scarce information about which stages of the nesting cycle are specifically affected. We conducted a 3-year study to
identify the effects of fire on the reproductive parameters of the great tit (Parus major) and the survival of its nests at
different stages of the nesting cycle. We recorded the occupancy rate, clutch and brood size, hatching, fledging and nesting
success in nest boxes placed on study plots with different post-fire age. By examining the post-fire succession, we analysed
the survival of eggs and nestlings under predation risks. As the forest matured after a wildfire, tits occupied more nest
boxes and laid more eggs that suffered less predation than in earlier successional stages. Although the incubation fate
improved at each step of succession, the conditions to fully raise nestlings seemed to be suitable only in the oldest woods.
Our findings indicate that the population dynamics of a reputed generalist avian species may be affected by fire.
Furthermore, the effects of wildfires on stage-specific reproductive parameters show that an avian species that inhabits
woodlands regains its full productivity only when its habitat has completely recovered from fire
Diurnal habitat suitability for a Mediterranean steppeland bird, identified by Ecological Niche Factor Analysis
Context. The negative effects of agricultural intensification and policies, use of pesticides, fertilisers and mechanised
harvesting on several populations of pseudo-steppe birds have increasingly required more detailed and effective habitat
suitability models. Distribution models of farmland species are prone to incur recordings of false absence data. Ecological
Niche Factor Analysis (ENFA) allows identification of environmental predictors of species distribution by using presence
data only.
Aims. We quantified the diurnal habitat preferences and niche width of one steppe species, the stone curlew (Burhinus
oedicnemus), with unfavourable conservations status in a Mediterranean area and reclassified a map with respect to habitat
suitability classes according to the resulting distribution model.
Methods. Ecological Niche Factor Analysis was used with GIS cartography customised with habitat and anthropogenic
variables recorded during field surveys carried out in four study plots (~500 ha) and at different spatial scales.
Key results. The stone curlew selected areas with low vegetation cover, such as fields following artichoke harvesting and
tillage, close to rural buildings and unpaved roads. In contrast, the stone curlew avoided areas with high vegetation cover and
areas highly disturbed by human-induced fires. The occurrence of natural vegetation was neither preferred nor avoided. The
most robust model was based on a large-scale analysis (200mfrom the bird location points), according to which the optimal
area for stone curlew distribution during its breeding season was restricted to 1% of the entire study area.
Conclusions. Two uncorrelated factors, ‘marginality’ and ‘tolerance’, described the stone curlew’s niche in the area. The
first index indicated selection for habitats that were marginal with respect to those available in the area, whereas the second
indicated a species with a medium–wide environmental niche. In particular, the stone curlew occupied a much more restricted
niche (low tolerance) in relation to individual variables. The use of customised databases at a large scale of analysis was found
to more effectively reveal ecological requirements of this marginal and specialised species.
Implications. Our results allowed us to indicate practical land management actions for the stone curlew, such as
prevention of human-induced fires and increase of pastoral activities. Our results indicated a potentially positive role of littledisturbed
service roads along rural buildings in stone curlew distribution, which warrants further research. In addition, studies
are needed to verify the presence of an ecological trap in artichoke fields, their preferred habitat. As we showed for the stone
curlew, niche analyses conducted at a large scale using customised databases could greatly improve habitat suitability
models of farmland species
Nest aggregation and reproductive synchrony promote Lesser Kestrel Falco naumanni seasonal fitness
Several factors promote coloniality by enhancing the fitness of colony members. In birds, spatial proximity among nests, breeder abundance and reproductive synchrony have been proposed as primary factors responsible for enhanced colonial defence and foraging success, which, in turn, enhance reproductive success. Whether these factors function synergistically or antagonistically remains, however, an open question due to the absence of an integrated analysis of their effects on fitness. We studied a large population of the Lesser Kestrel, Falco naumanni, a facultative colonial species, breeding in colonies of different sizes in their typical pseudo-steppe habitat. We quantified both the singular and interactive effects of nest distance, breeder abundance and reproductive synchrony on kestrel fitness measured as the time to survival of eggs to hatching and nestlings to fledging. Egg survival increased as reproductive stages became more synchronous with the timing of colony breeding, whereas nestling survival benefited from a higher synchrony with most nests in the entire population. Nestling survival was also positively affected by the interaction between nest distance and breeder abundance. Our results suggest that the presence of additional breeders in the colony is not sufficient per se, to trigger colonial advantages, but instead, that synchronised reproduction among multiple breeding pairs nesting in close spatial proximity is necessary to realise those benefits. Our findings provide a novel perspective for future investigations that explore the mechanisms underlying fitness variation among Lesser Kestrel colonies and group-living species in genera
Changes in behavioural response of Mediterranean Seabass (Dicenthratus labrax L.) under different feeding distributions
Captive-induced behavioural deviations may
involve many aspects of fish behaviour such as
swimming activity and enhancement of individual
aggressiveness. We studied seabass
(Dicentrarchus labrax) behaviour as a function
of manual and automatic feeding distribution
modes. Under manual mode, the food is distributed
over an extended area for a longer period,
and its precise location is not always predictable,
while with pneumatic automatic feeders,
fish receive the same amount of resource,
which is concentrated in the same surface area
over a shorter period. We compared seabass
behaviour under automatic and manual conditions
collecting video image recordings before,
during, and after feeding distribution, in the
morning and in afternoon, on two different
days, and analysing data within independent
sessions of measurements. Feeding modes significantly
affected swimming behaviour: automatically-
fed fish were characterised by vertical
movements through the water column (towards
the surface and bottom) and by horizontal
swimming. Manually-fed fish were instead
characterised by sharp direction changes during
their swimming, mostly towards the surface.
Feeding distribution induced changes in
collision frequency and elicited aggressive
behaviour. In particular, agonistic behaviour
(i.e. a fish attacks another fish) was almost
exclusively recorded during the feeding under
automatic distribution, whereas it was constantly
expressed during all the distribution
phases under manual mod
Food for flight: pre-migratory dynamics of the Lesser Kestrel Falco naumanni.
Capsule The post-reproductive stage of Lesser Kestrel is crucial for migratory fuelling and survival.
Aims To describe the summer pre-migratory ecology of the Lesser Kestrel in Sicily and review existing data in
Southern Europe.
Methods We identified the main summer roosts and then made roost counts every ten days from 2010 to
2012. We used case-sensitive modelling procedures to detect biases in counts (generalized linear mixed
models), assess the annual population trends from 2005 to 2012 (TRends and Indices for Monitoring);
and to model habitat preferences (generalized linear model). We sampled pellets to describe the birds’
diet during the peak month prior to migration.
Results We discovered five roosts in Sicily with numbers of Lesser Kestrels varying annually (mean ±sd:
2112±387; min–max: 1797–2544). Counts at the main roost were not biased by meteorological
conditions and showed an August peak followed by persistent decline through October. Less urbanized
and heterogeneous agricultural areas with large cereal fields were the most significant habitats preferred
during summer. Within this landscape, Lesser Kestrels prey on seasonally high concentrations of the
small cricket Grylloderes brunneri.
Conclusion Arable land not fragmented by agricultural intensification supports habitat rich with
Orthopterans and attracts a large number of Lesser Kestrels fuelling before migration. Conservation of
such pre-migratory habitats is as vital as conservation of breeding areas
Effects of nautical traffic and noise on foraging patterns of Mediterranean damlsefish (Chromis chromis)
Chromis chromis is a key species in the Mediterranean marine coastal ecosystems where, in summer, recreational boating and its associated noise overlap. Anthropogenic noise could induce behavioural modifications in marine organisms, thereby affecting population dynamics. In the case of an important species for the ecosystem like C. chromis, this could rebound on the community structure. Here, we measured nautical traffic during the summer of 2007 in a Southern Mediterranean Marine Protected Area (MPA) and simultaneously the feeding behaviour of C. chromis was video-recorded, within both the no-take A-zone and the B-zone where recreational use is allowed. Feeding frequencies, escape reaction and school density were analysed. C. chromis specimens were also collected from 2007 to 2008 to evaluate their physiological state using the Body Condition Index as a proxy of feeding efficiency. The MPA was more exploited by nautical tourism during holidays than on weekdays, particularly in the middle of the day. Greater traffic volume corresponded with lower feeding frequencies. The escape reaction was longer in duration (>1 min) when boat passed nearby, while moored boats did not induce an escape response. We found no differences in density between schools in the A- and B-zones and worse body conditions among those individuals inhabiting the B-zone in one area only. Overall, our findings revealed a significant modification of the daily foraging habits of C. chromis due to boat noise, which was slightly buffered by no-take zones established within the MPA
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