26 research outputs found

    Avian Feathers as Bioindicators of the Exposure to Heavy Metal Contamination of Food

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    The aim of this study was to determine the possibility of using feathers of blue tit nestlings to assess the level of endogenous accumulation of lead. For this purpose we conducted an experiment with lead application to randomly chosen nestlings from eight randomly drawn broods. Five days after the exposure, feathers of lead-treated nestlings had significantly higher lead concentrations than control nestlings. This result suggests that feathers can be used as reliable non-destructive bioindicators to assess the level of heavy metals originating from contaminated food, which is of great significance for comparative studies on ecological consequences of pollution

    Density-dependent reproductive output in relation to a drastically varying food supply: getting the density measure right

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    When a limiting resource (e.g. food) varies drastically between years, and population density is measured in the conventional way as individuals per area, demographic processes such as productivity and survival may erroneously be considered density-independent. We tested the hypothesis that if the variation in a limiting resource is not taken into account in the density measure, this may lead to erroneous conclusions about the density-dependence of demographic variables. We studied the food-related variation in productivity of bramblings Fringilla montifringilla, an insectivorous passerine bird, using 19 years of standardised insect censusing, bird censusing and mist-netting of birds in subalpine birch forest in Swedish Lapland. The yearly variation in our measure of brambling per capita productivity (numbers of juveniles per adult trapped) was explained to 30-40% by the larvae abundance of the moth Epirrita autumnata. Taking larvae density into account, no other environmental variable (inferred predation pressure, breeding phenology, and summer temperature) was significantly related to variation in reproductive output. There was no effect of brambling population density on per capita productivity, that is, when density was measured the conventional way, productivity seemed density-independent. However, per capita productivity was significantly and negatively correlated to the food-related population density (population density divided by larval density), supporting the hypothesis that not including a limiting resource into the density measure may indeed lead to erroneous conclusions about the density-dependence of demographic variables

    Large-scale geographical variation confirms that climate change causes birds to lay earlier

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    Advances in the phenology of organisms are often attributed to climate change, but alternatively, may reflect a publication bias towards advances and may be caused by environmental factors unrelated to climate change. Both factors are investigated using the breeding dates of 25 long-term studied populations of Ficedula flycatchers across Europe. Trends in spring temperature varied markedly between study sites, and across populations the advancement of laying date was stronger in areas where the spring temperatures increased more, giving support to the theory that climate change causally affects breeding date advancement.
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