11 research outputs found
Average mass of seeds encountered by foraging dabbling ducks in Western Europe
Many
dabbling ducks Anas spp. are largely granivorous, consuming a variety of seeds
chiefly from aquatic plants. To assess the relative value and carrying capacity
of wetlands for dabbling ducks, species-specific information about seed mass is
needed, but it is still largely missing or scattered in the literature. By
combining weights of seeds collected in the field with a literature review, we
provide a reference table for seed mass of 200 western European plant taxa
frequently encountered by foraging dabbling ducks. Seeds collected in the field
were sampled in microhabitats and at depths at which ducks were observed to
forage, and study sites represent wintering, staging as well as breeding areas
within a flyway in western Europe. When combined with calorimetric data, the
present reference table will aid managers and scientists in assessing the
importance of seed food resources at different sites and during different parts
of the annual cycle.</p
Dénombrement des Anatidés dans le Parc national des oiseaux du Djoudj et ses environs (janvier 1990)
Dans le cadre du programme lancé en 189 sur l'évolution de l'impact du barrage de Diama sur le stationnement des Anatidés paléarctiques et afrotropicaux hivernant dans le bassin du Sénégal, une seconde mission a été réalisée en janvier 1990 au cours de laquelle une opération de dénombrement a été réalisée sur les principales zones humides du Sénéga
Movement patterns in a partial migrant: A multi-event capture-recapture approach
International audiencePartial migration is a pervasive albeit poorly studied phenomenon by which some individuals of a population migrate while others are residents. It has tremendous consequences on seasonal variations of population size/structure and therefore management. Using a multi-event capture-mark-recapture/recovery (CMR) approach, we assessed seasonal site occupancy, survival and site fidelity of a partially migratory diving duck, the Common pochard (Aythya ferina), in an area potentially including both local breeders and winter visitors. The modelling exercise indeed discriminated two different categories of individuals. First, locally breeding females which had a probability of being present in our study area during winter of 0.41. Females of this category were found to be more faithful to their breeding site than males (breeding site fidelity probabilities of 1 and 0.11, respectively). The second category of birds were winter visitors, which included adults of both sexes, whose probability of being present in the study area during the breeding season was nil, and young of both sexes with a 0.11 probability of being present in the area during the breeding season. All wintering individuals, among which there was virtually no locally breeding male, displayed a high fidelity to our study area from one winter to the next (0.41-0.43). Estimated annual survival rates differed according to age (adults 0.69, young 0.56). For both age classes mortality was higher during late winter/early spring than during summer/early winter. Our study is among the first to show how and under which conditions the multi-event approach can be employed for investigating complex movement patterns encountered in partial migrants, providing a convenient tool for overcoming state uncertainty. It also shows why studying patterns of probability of individual presence/movements in partial migrants is a key towards understanding seasonal variations in numbers. \textcopyright 2014 Gourlay-Larour et al