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Site fidelity and home range variation during the breeding season of peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus) in Yamal,Russia
Authors:Vasiliy Sokolov  Nicolas Lecomte  Aleksandr Sokolov  Md Lutfor Rahman  Andrew Dixon
Institution:1. Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Division Russian Academy of Sciences, 202-8 Marta Street, 620144, Yekaterinburg, Russia
2. Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, University of Troms?, 9037, Tromsō, Norway
3. Canada Research Chair in Polar and Boreal Ecology, Department of Biology, University of Moncton, Moncton, E1A 3E9, Canada
4. Ecological Research Station of Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Division Russian Academy of Sciences, 21 Zelenaya Gorka, 629400, Labytnangi, Yamalo-Nenetski District, Russia
5. International Wildlife Consultants Ltd, PO Box 19, Carmarthen, SA33 5YL, UK
Abstract:Many different ecological factors affecting the size, use, and spatial configuration of home ranges have been investigated, yet the chronology of the breeding cycle has been relatively under studied. Here, we studied peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus) to describe variation in home range within and between breeding seasons in the Yamal peninsula, a region of the Russian Arctic with a high breeding density of peregrines. We used satellite telemetry to investigate variation in home range at different stages of the breeding cycle during three breeding seasons (2009–2011). We fitted Argos satellite transmitters to 10 breeding peregrines (nine females and one male) and two male fledglings. All breeding females showed fidelity to the region of the southwestern Yamal peninsula, but they were not necessarily faithful to their specific breeding ranges with 33 % dispersing to new ranges up to 40 km away. The population of peregrines in our study area was relatively synchronous in their breeding chronology, with clutches initiated in close synchrony in early June despite the birds arriving on their breeding ranges ca. 3 weeks earlier. The average home range size for breeding females was 98 km2 (95 % Maximum Convex Polygon). Over the breeding season, the home range area utilized by females increased in the late nestling period and again after the chicks fledged. Expansion of the home range coincided with changes in behavior associated with parental care, resulting in greater activity and more time spent away from the nest area when the female began hunting to provision nestlings and fledglings.
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