|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
|
Home | About Us | Membership | Online Store | Conferences | The British List | Checklists | Ibis |
|||||||||||||||
BOU Register of Avian Thesis AbstractsJacquie A. ClarkEffects of severe weather on wintering wadersInstitution: University of East Anglia, U.K. Current Address: British Trust for Ornithology, Thetford, U.K. IP24 2PU (Aug 2005) Subject Keywords: Species Keywords: Dunlin Calidris alpina, Redshank Tringa totanus, Grey Plover Pluvialis squatarola
Abstract: Severe winter weather, operating directly or indirectly, may cause increased mortality in waders in temperate zones. The level of mortality varies between species and also temporally and geographically. Redshank are particularly vulnerable to increased mortality in severe weather, Grey Plover have apparently become more vulnerable following population increase. The annual cycles of northern wintering waders take account of the possibility of severe weather. Waders increase in mass in winter presumably as an insurance against the chance of starvation. Maximum mass is probably a result of ‘expected’ temperature and feeding time available, mediated by predation. At the start of severe weather waders appear to be able to increase their mass, but in a severe or persistent severe period individuals may lose mass and some may die. The reduction in mass below that expected for the time of year may persist for over a month after the end of a particularly severe spell and could have implications for breeding success in the following summer. The waders which died in a severe weather period in February 1991 tended to be smaller than waders caught and measured in the ten years before the incident. Measurements of birds caught in the following ten years indicate that the size change did not persist in the populations. Published Papers: Clark, J.A. 2004. Ringing recoveries confirm high wader mortality in severe winters. Ringing & Migration 22:43-50. |
||||||||||||||||
|
BOU, PO Box 417, Peterborough PE7 3FX, UK
|
||||||||||||||||