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Density dependence in a recovering osprey population: demographic and behavioural processes
Authors:Bretagnolle V  Mougeot F  Thibault J-C
Institution:CEBC-CNRS, 79360, Beauvoir sur Niort, France;;School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 2TZ, Scotland, UK;;Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos (UCLM-CSIC-JCCM), Ciudad Real, Spain;;Estacion Experimental de Zonas Aridas, CSIC C/General Segura 1, 04001 Almerıa, Spain;;Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Département Systématique et Evolution, Case postale 51, 55 rue Buffon, F-75005 Paris, France
Abstract:1. Understanding how density-dependent and independent processes influence demographic parameters, and hence regulate population size, is fundamental within population ecology. We investigated density dependence in growth rate and fecundity in a recovering population of a semicolonial raptor, the osprey Pandion haliaetus Linnaeus, 1758], using 31 years of count and demographic data in Corsica. 2. The study population increased from three pairs in 1974 to an average of 22 pairs in the late 1990s, with two distinct phases during the recovery (increase followed by stability) and contrasted trends in breeding parameters in each phase. 3. We show density dependence in population growth rate in the second phase, indicating that the stabilized population was regulated. We also show density dependence in productivity (fledging success between years and hatching success within years). 4. Using long-term data on behavioural interactions at nest sites, and on diet and fish provisioning rate, we evaluated two possible mechanisms of density dependence in productivity, food depletion and behavioural interference. 5. As density increased, both provisioning rate and the size of prey increased, contrary to predictions of a food-depletion mechanism. In the time series, a reduction in fledging success coincided with an increase in the number of non-breeders. Hatching success decreased with increasing local density and frequency of interactions with conspecifics, suggesting that behavioural interference was influencing hatching success. 6. Our study shows that, taking into account the role of non-breeders, in particular in species or populations where there are many floaters and where competition for nest sites is intense, can improve our understanding of density-dependent processes and help conservation actions.
Keywords:density dependence  interference competition  osprey                Pandion haliaetus              population growth rate  population regulation  resource depletion
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