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Effects of the winter beechmast crop on bird occurrence in British gardens
Authors:Dan E Chamberlain  Andrew G Gosler  David E Glue
Institution:Centre for Wildlife Assessment and Conservation , University of Reading , Whiteknights, PO Box 228, Reading , RG6 6AJ , UK
Abstract:Capsule Woodland birds were significantly less likely to occur in gardens in years of high beechmast crop.

Aim To test the hypothesis that woodland species that feed on beechmast will have significantly lower occurrence rates at garden feeders in mast years.

Methods Weekly winter occurrence rates at garden feeders between 1970/71 and 1999/2000 for 40 species were analysed in relation to annual beechmast abundance, classified into low, medium and high years. A repeated-measures logistic regression model was used to assess whether beechmast abundance explained further significant variation additional to underlying seasonal and annual trends.

Results Seven species that commonly feed on beechmast showed significantly lower occurrence in gardens in years of highest beechmast abundance: Great Spotted Woodpecker Dendrocopos major, Woodpigeon Columba palumbus, Great Tit Parus major, Coal Tit Periparus ater, Nuthatch Sitta europaea, Jay Garrulus glandarius and Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs. Blackbird Turdus merula and Siskin Carduelis spinus, which showed similar significant patterns, are likely to take beechmast as elements of their diet. Pied Wagtail Motacilla alba was the only insectivorous species to show significant effects, but occurrence was lowest in years of intermediate beechmast abundance. For the latter species, this may have been due to confounding effects of temperature, but there were no such confounding effects of either temperature, or the number of bird feeders provided in gardens, for the other nine species.

Conclusion Use of artificial food sources by birds in gardens is influenced by resources in the surrounding countryside, suggesting that food provided in gardens may play a significant part in the population dynamics of these species, that population monitoring without consideration of the garden habitat may be deficient, and that volunteer-based garden bird recording may provide data that can be used as an indicator of changes in the wider countryside.
Keywords:Sparrowhawk  Accipiter  Black-headed Gull  Larus  Great Spotted Woodpecker  Dendrocopos  Feral Pigeon  Columbia  Wood Pigeon  Collared Dove  Streptopelia  Pied Wagtail  Motacilla  Wren  Troglodytes  Dunnock  Prunella  Robin  Erithacus  Blackbird  Turdus  Song Thrush  Mistle Thrush  Great Tit  Parus  Coal Tit  Periparus  Marsh/Willow Tit  Poecile  Long-tailed Tit  Aegithalos  Nuthatch  Sitta  Jay  Garrulus  Magpie  Pica  Carrion Crow  Corvus  Rook  Jackdaw C  monedula  Starling  Sturnus  House Sparrow  Passer  Tree Sparrow  Chaffinch  Fringilla  Greenfinch  Carduelis  Goldfinch  Siskin  Yellowhammer  Emberiza  Reed Bunting
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