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NEWS

Recent changes on migratory behaviour of the White stork (Ciconia ciconia) in Portugal: towards the end of migration? 

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MASTER THESIS PROJECT

Ana Sampaio,  a student from the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisboa is now starting her master thesis project entitled "Role of sex, age composition and season in determining diet composition and provisioning rates of the European Roller in an extensive agricultural landscape".

 

The main goal of the project is to add building knowledge on the foraging ecology of a species inhabiting a threatened habitat. The observed negative trends of European Rollers have been attributed to habitat loss due to changes in agricultural practices, with negative consequences for prey populations. Foraging behaviour is expected to be adjusted to the type and distribution of prey, to habitat characteristics and, consequently, to the resulting accessibility and vulnerability of prey. In this project, Ana will use a set of complementary methologies (pellet, stable isotope and video-recording analyses) to asess the diet of both adult and chick rollers, throughout the breeding season. She will also characterize chick-provisioning rates and activity budgets of rollers and determine potential sources of variation (sex-specific rates, environmental conditions, parental age, etc). Fieldwork will be carried out in Castro Verde SPA, southern Portugal.

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Abstract

Seasonal decline in breeding performance is a commonly observed pattern in birds, but disentangling the contributions of environmental conditions (“timing” hypothesis) and individual quality (“quality” hypothesis) to such a pattern is challenging. Moreover, despite the strong selection for early breeding, the individual optimization model predicts that each individual has an optimal breeding window. We investigated the causes and consequences of laying decisions in the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) by combining a long-term dataset on reproductive traits with information on food availability. A marked seasonal decline was found in breeding success, mostly mediated by a decline in clutch size. The “timing” hypothesis, supported by the decline in consumption of mole crickets, key prey for pre-laying females, seems to explain the seasonal trend in clutch size, as this pattern was recorded in both higher (adults) and lower (yearlings) quality individuals. Contrarily, the higher proportion of yearlings breeding late in the season, rather than a decay in food availability during chick-rearing, seems to drive the decline in fledging success, giving support to the “quality” hypothesis. Advanced breeding and increased clutch size, as proxies of reproductive effort, were not offset by lower survival. Low repeatability in both these traits suggests that individual quality is a dynamic attribute and reproduction costs are minimized by individual optimization. Understanding the mechanisms driving individual breeding decisions is critical to anticipate species’ ability to cope with environmental changes. Here, we show that lesser kestrels failing the pre-laying food window opportunity compromise reproductive performance, mostly regardless of their individual quality.

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ON THE TRACK OF THE WHITE STORK

We've started tracking storks in 2012 using solar GPS/GSM loggers (check https://www.bto.org/science/migration/tracking-studies/stork-tracking) to unveil the mechanisms through which migratory behaviour of white storks can be altered. The causes of these changes are not fully established but both climatic change and increased winter food availability have been proposed as possible factors.

Today, we keep tracking both adults and juveniles tagged in Spring 2016.

Baron and Mendel, two chicks born in the Algarve, headed north before starting their migratory journey towards the Strait of Gibraltar. They both successfully crossed the desert and arrived at Senegal. In the last couple of weeks, they seem to be moving considerably between north Senegal and south Mauritania. Have they reached their final destination?

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Read the whole article here!

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