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1.
《Ostrich》2013,84(3):295-296
The Red-billed Quelea Quelea quelea is a serious pest of agricultural crops throughout most of sub-Saharan Africa. Since the 1980s, it has expanded its range into the Eastern Cape and Western Cape, South Africa, facilitated by changes in agricultural practices. This note documents the first breeding of Red-billed Quelea in the winter rainfall region of South Africa. A colony of 350–600 nests was found, with evidence of recent breeding. Red-billed Quelea numbers were low in this region, but if numbers increase in the future in the Western Cape, winter crops could be under threat.  相似文献   

2.
Wim C. Mulliè 《Ostrich》2013,84(1-2):15-20
Mullié, W.C. 2000. Traditional capture of Red-billed Quelea Quelea quelea in the Lake Chad Basin and its possible role in reducing damage levels in cereals. Ostrich 71 (1 & 2): 15–20.

Three traditional methods of capturing Red-billed Quelea Quelea quelea practised by different ethnic groups, were studied in the Lake Chad Basin in Chad and Cameroon: capture of birds by triangular hand-held nets by Hadjeraï piégeurs (trappers); with standing fishing nets of the “mist net” type by Gambai; and by cast nets (épervier) by Massa and Mousgoum fishermen.

The Hadjeraï net was found to be both selective for queleas and highly efficient. As many as 1.2 million birds were captured from 13 June to 21 August 1994 around N'Djamena, Chad, alone, until activities ceased due to heavy rains. Birds were trapped in tree roosts during moonless periods of the night. They were plucked and fried the following morning, subsequently dried in the sun, and eventually transported to the market in N'Djamena to be sold. The piégeurs operated in teams of about 6 men and each team could process about 20 000 birds per day. Once this number had been captured, they withdrew from further trapping. The catches were almost entirely composed of queleas, with sometimes a small percentage (<1%) of Golden Sparrow Passer luteus. It was estimated that annually at least 5–10 million queleas were trapped, with a market value of about 19–38 million FCFA (USA37 500–75 000).

The impact of trapping on the population of queleas in the Lake Chad Basin, estimated at about 200 million individuals in 1976/77, was insignificant. Since activities of piégeurs are aimed at maximising revenues, and not at minimising damage levels, there is no causal relationship between crop damage and number of birds trapped. However, compared to crop losses in pearl millet due to quelea damage, revenues from selling quelea are up to 40% of capitalized crop losses due to quelea in the same area.  相似文献   

3.
Whittington-Jones, C.A. 1997. Apparent range expansion of the Redbilled Quelea Quelea quelea in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. Ostrich 68 (2–4): 97–103.

Distribution records obtained from the South African Bird Atlas Project (SABAP) and from published literature show that the known distribution of Redbilled Quelea in the Eastern Cape has changed dramatically over the last century. Increased search effort following the initiation of SABAP may explain the range expansion, but changes in agricultural practice have probably been a contributing factor.  相似文献   

4.
A migratory divide usually signals the presence of a geographical region over which other traits, such as morphology and genotypes, also undergo rapid change. A migratory divide has been hypothesized in central southern Africa for the abundant migratory weaver, the red-billed quelea Quelea quelea. The positioning of the divide in the region is based on the patterns of rainfall in the region that stimulate the annual migrations of queleas. Evidence indicates that premigratory queleas near the divide show two distinct preferred directions for migration. We used eight polymorphic microsatellite loci and a range of plumage characters to determine whether there was population structure among red-billed queleas in southern Africa, and specifically whether this structure coincided with the location of the migratory divide. There was no evidence of population genetic structure. An amova revealed no significant differences between samples taken either side of the migratory divide. Similarly, there was no geographical variation in plumage patterns across southern Africa. For both microsatellites and plumage characteristics, the variation that does exist occurs within each sampled site, with little differentiation between sites. We were therefore unable to find any evidence that either plumage or microsatellite genotypes varied in a similar way to migratory direction preference in red-billed queleas in southern Africa. This is perhaps because the migratory divide does not act to separate individuals into populations within which genetic and plumage differentiation can be maintained.  相似文献   

5.
R. A. Jubb B.Sc. 《Ostrich》2013,84(3):162-164
Cyrus, Digby P. 1986. Seasonal and spatial distribution of Redheaded Quelea (Quelea erythrops) in South Africa. Ostrich. 57: 162–169.

There are 48 records of Redheaded Quelea Quelea erythrops occurring in South Africa. Most are for the summer and early autumn months from October to April and all are restricted to the low lying eastern coastal areas. The pattern of occurrence in South Africa is similar to that in adjoining countries to the north; the species does not however occur as regularly in the south. Breeding or attempted breeding has been recorded on six occasions. This shows the typical pattern of occurrence of a species at the southern limit of its distribution.

There is some evidence to suggest that its occurrence may be associated with “wet” years when rainfall is above average. The Redheaded Quelea may be considered as a rare and irruptive summer vagrant to South Africa, which only breeds when conditions are suitable.  相似文献   

6.
《Ostrich》2013,84(3):555-559
The timing of primary moult of adult Red-billed Queleas Quelea quelea, captured as they were completing an unusually late breeding attempt at Francistown, northern Botswana, in June 2004, was compared with the timing of moult of birds breeding earlier in the season in north-west Botswana during two earlier years, 1971 and 1972. Differences between years in the dates when local colonies finished breeding (mid-March to late June) and between two localities in the same year (mid-March and late May) were matched by corresponding differences in the estimated dates of moult onset, ranging from mid-April to mid-June. Flexibility in the timing of moult among Red-billed Queleas in southern Africa evidently enables birds to take advantage of unusually late breeding opportunities by delaying moult onset and overlapping moult and breeding at the end of the nesting cycle. Such flexibility may also include moult interruption to permit late breeding, although its incidence in southern Africa is apparently low.  相似文献   

7.
In a Red-billed quelea colony in north-eastern Nigeria that was later abandoned as a result of the poor nutritional condition of the adults, laying females showed low haematocrit values compared with normal pre-breeding haematocrit levels but nestbuilding males did not. In females the low haematocrits were correlated with extremely low levels of reserve lipid and labile protein but males in equally poor condition did not have such low haematocrits. This difference must result in some way from the additional nutritional burden for females of mobilizing sufficient protein to form eggs. Earlier observations of massive red blood cell production in the thymus of queleas during incubation suggest that low haematocrits, indicating anaemia, may be a normal occurrence in queleas during breeding, and were not peculiar to this abnormal abandoned colony.  相似文献   

8.
In order to detect sex-biased dispersal in the red-billed quelea Quelea quelea in southern Africa, we used the assignment index technique to determine the probability that individuals originated from the population in which they were sampled. This is the first time that this multilocus genetic test has been used in a bird species and is informative despite evidence that the population under study exhibits little genetic structure. There was a pattern of male-biased dispersal, the first example in a passerine, and the first time that evidence of a sex-biased pattern of dispersal has been shown for queleas.  相似文献   

9.
Migration patterns in the red-billed quelea Quelea quelea have been the focus of intense research as the species is a major crop pest in Africa. The direction and timing of migration are believed to be controlled by the seasonal passage of rainfronts across Africa. In order to assess the validity of hypothesised migration directions in southern Africa, we tested the migration orientation behaviour of wild-caught red-billed queleas using Emlen orientation funnels. Queleas tested in Zimbabwe showed mean orientation directions to the west-north-west and east-south-east. Both directions are in agreement with current hypotheses explaining quelea migration.  相似文献   

10.
We investigate biogeographical, regional and sub‐regional‐scale responses of scarabaeine dung beetles to late Cenozoic changes in edaphic and climatic character that created a Savanna/Karoo transition zone in the Northern Cape, South Africa. Across a 50 200 km2 study area, the Northern Cape species pool comprised six biogeographical groups defined from distribution across southern Africa. These species groups contributed in different proportions to five regional assemblages defined from structural differences across the transition zone. Towards transition zone peripheries, regional assemblage structure was more strongly correlated to sandiness dating from Miocene to Pliocene deposition (Kalahari), aridity dating from Pliocene to Pleistocene climatic change (Bushmanland Karoo), or cooler temperatures dating from Miocene to Pliocene uplift (Upper Karoo). Correlates of sub‐regional assemblages trended to intensification of dominant drivers towards regional peripheries. Drivers of central transition zone, regional assemblages (‘Gariep Karoo’, ‘Gariep Stony Karoo’) showed no dominance. Biogeographically, endemism dominates the Northern Cape transition zone: south‐west arid groups in Nama Karoo regions; Kalahari plus north‐east savanna groups in the Kalahari. Regionally, transition drives assemblage structure: unique variance, 60% in the Kalahari, 21–30% in four Nama Karoo regions; shared variance (overlap), 25–65% between Kalahari and warmer Karoo regions, 11–71% between mainly cooler Karoo regions.  相似文献   

11.
J. Sneyd Taylor 《Ostrich》2013,84(1):44-49
McLachlan, A., Woodridge, T., Schramm, M. &; Kühn, M. 1980. Seasonal abundance, biomass and feeding of shore birds on sandy beaches in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Ostrich 51:44-52.

The numbers of birds on three Eastern Cape sandy beaches were monitored monthly over one year during 1977/78. Dominant among 17 species were the Southern Blackbacked Gull Larus dominicanus, Black Oystercatcher Haematopus moquini, Whitefronted Sandplover Charadrius marginatus and Sanderling Calidris alba. These four species made up 95% of bird numbers and their respective biomass values were 78 652, 7 695, 578 and 3 116 kJ/km shoreline. Total food consumption for these species, calculated on the basis of estimated standard metabolic rates, was 4 159 394, 521 149, 76 768 and 363 053 kJ/km respectively. Food composition and feeding behaviour are also discussed and the total quantity of intertidal macrobenthic animals consumed by birds estimated.  相似文献   

12.
Thymic lobes form over 200 red-billed queleas, Quelea quelea L., were examined histologically. Samples were taken from embryos about to hatch, juveniles and adults. The lobes varied in size from very small to very enlarged (1- greater than 5 mm long). The constituent cell types are described in detail and the occurrence of these cells in different sized lobes is discussed. A cycle of events is proposed which accounts for the observations presented here. It is suggested that the large numbers of erythroid cells found in the cortex of some individuals were developing in situ. The significance of erythropoiesis within the thymus is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
In 2011, a male pristiophorid was caught by a prawn trawler north east of Cape Moreton, Queensland, Australia. Molecular analyses confirmed the specimen to be the common sawshark Pristiophorus cirratus. Historical catch data indicate the occurrence of the species in the region but this is the first verified record of P. cirratus occurring in the waters of southern Queensland. Together, these records extend the recognised northern limit of P. cirratus by c. 500 km, which suggests that further investigation of its distribution is warranted.  相似文献   

14.
Elliot, C: C. H., Waltner, M., Underhill. L. G., Pringle, J. S. & Dick, W. J. A. 1976. The migration system of the Curlew Sandpiper Calidris ferruginea in Africa. Ostrich 47:191-213. Data on ringing and recoveries of Curlew Sandpiper, mainly from the Cape, South Africa are presented. Possible migration routes to the breeding grounds are considered in the light of these and other recoveries from the rest of Africa. Retraps show that the species exhibits ortstreue and some evidence is presented which suggests that some birds may travel together and stay in the south in the same flock during one and subsequent migrations. Sex ratio statistics show an excess of females. Adults complete a full primary moult in the Cape between September and February, taking about 140 days but there is a lot of individual variation. Data from Mauritania show primary moult starting faster, a month earlier than in the Cape, and arrested moult in a few adults. The difference may be because Mauritanian birds move on further south while the Cape is the end point of the migration. Kenyan moult records from the Rift Valley follow the Cape pattern except that some birds arrest moult and finish later. Juvenile moult is shown to be different from that of adults, involving only a moult of the outer primaries and taking place during the overwintering period, April to August. All juveniles in the Cape are thought to overwinter and the modified moult to be an adaptation to this behaviour. The weight of adults but not juveniles increases markedly in the six weeks before migration. Fat and protein analyses suggest that the increase is entirely due to deposition of migratory fat. Kenyan birds have lower mean weights and deposit fat about two weeks later than those at the Cape. The nearer the non-breeding quarters are to the breeding grounds, the earlier moult starts and the later fat deposition takes place.  相似文献   

15.
Herbaceous and woody alien plants visible from a moving vehicle were recorded along 1 km roadside transects at 5 km intervals over a distance of 5869 km in the semi-arid and arid Fynbos, Succulent Karoo, Nama Karoo and Arid Savanna (Kalahari) biomes in South Africa. Each 1 km transect was classified by biome and vegetation type, mean annual rainfall, rainfall seasonality, soil surface type and landuse adjoining the roadside. Although travelling speed affected the range and frequency of plant species observed, the method was repeatable at a speed of 100 km h?1. Alien plants occurred in 98% of 119 Fynbos, 81% of 204 Succulent Karoo, 72% of 661 Nama Karoo, 47% of 171 Arid Savanna and 100% of seventeen Grassland transects. Alien species richness per site was correlated with mean annual rainfall, but in all regions, sites adjacent to cultivation had significantly more alien species than sites adjoining rangeland. The alien plant assemblage of the arid winter-rainfall Succulent Karoo included species from mesic winter-rainfall lowland Fynbos and the arid Nama Karoo receives unseasonal rainfall. The frequencies of Prosopis spp., Atriplex spp. and Opuntia ficus-indica were not significantly greater near cultivation, and these perennial plants, all of which are dispersed by indigenous and domestic animals, can invade natural rangeland in arid and semi-arid southern Africa.  相似文献   

16.
D. Whitelaw 《Ostrich》2013,84(4):236-241
Silbernagl, H. P. 1982. Seasonal and spatial distribution of the American Purple Gallinule in South Africa. Ostrich 53:236-240.

The American Purple Gallinule Porphyrula martinica has been recorded 21 times in the southwestern Cape Province of South Africa. Nearly all records fall in the period 22 April to 2 July and nearly all birds were juveniles. The majority of dated records for which weather data are available appear to be of birds starting their northward migration in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina, or Uruguay and caught by strong westerly winds which carry them downwind to South Africa in about five days. Most birds arrive in South Africa in an exhausted condition and markedly below normal weight. Thus it is unlikely that the American Purple Gallinule will establish a breeding population in Africa.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A breeding colony of Red-billed queleas, established in N.E. Nigeria under poor feeding conditions occasioned by drought, was abandoned after the eggs had been laid. Inadequate energy intake caused males to leave before completing the nests. This resulted in thousands of eggs being laid through bottomless nests onto the ground. The females left progressively as they completed their clutches; below normal protein- and fat-reserves probably combined to induce abandonment. Some individuals, predominantly females, died on the last night of occupation. Death apparently resulted from an adverse nutritional balance at a crucial stage in the laying sequence. The main value of the fat reserves in females beginning to lay appears to be in allowing maximal foraging "for protein".  相似文献   

19.
C. C. H. ELLIOTT 《Ibis》1990,132(2):232-237
Recent studies on the migrations of the Red-billed Quelea Quelea quelea have shown that while the species is capable of long-distance movements of hundreds of kilometres, the actual migrations probably more often consist of shorter distances with a flexible timing. This flexibility allows adjustments to be made to the rainfall distribution in a particular year. New information comes from studies on the breeding distribution, on the plumage and moult of local populations, and from attempts to apply new techniques such as mass-marking with fluorescent particles. Breeding has been shown to be both more widespread and more frequent than previously recognized, while local populations can prolong breeding in one place if rainfall continues. Local populations have been identified that are apparently distinct, with limited intermixing with other populations, and some data suggest that intermixing may be reduced by flock or group cohesion. The flexibility of the migrations means that predictions of major influxes of quelea into agricultural areas have proved difficult to make, especially in regions where the rainfall patterns are complex and variable, such as East Africa.  相似文献   

20.
Aim Climate‐modelling exercises have demonstrated that the Cape Floristic Region is highly sensitive to climate change and will apparently lose much of its northern limits over the next few decades. Because there is little monitoring of diversity in this area, ant assemblage structure was investigated within the main vegetation types in the Greater Cederberg Biodiversity Corridor. In particular, we sought to determine how ant assemblage structure differs between the main vegetation types, how restricted ants – and in particular the major myrmecochores – are to the major vegetation types, and which environmental variables might underlie differences in the ant assemblages and in the specificity of species to particular areas. Location Northern Cape Floristic Region, Western Cape, South Africa. Methods Sampling was undertaken during October 2002 and March 2003 across an altitudinal gradient ranging from sea level (Lambert's Bay) to c. 2000 m a.s.l. (Sneeukop, Cederberg) and down again to 500 m a.s.l. (Wupperthal) in the Western Cape, South Africa. Pitfall traps were used to sample ants at 17 altitudinal bands, stretching over three vegetation types (Strandveld, Mountain Fynbos and Succulent Karoo). Biotic and abiotic environmental variables were collected at each sampling site. Generalized linear models were used to determine the relationships between species richness, density, abundance and the abundance of the major myrmecochores, and the environmental variables. Redundancy analysis was used to determine the relationship between ant assemblage structure and the environmental variables. The Indicator Value Method was used to identify characteristic ant species for each vegetation type and altitudinal site. Results Temperature explained significant proportions of the variation in species density and abundance, and, together with area and several vegetation variables, contributed significantly to the separation of the assemblages in the major vegetation types and biomes. Four major myrmecochores were identified [Anoplolepis sp. (cf. custodiens), Anoplolepis sp. (cf. steinergroeveri), Camponotus niveosetosus, Tetramorium quadrispinosum]. The abundances of the two Anoplolepis species were related to vegetation variables, while the abundance of the other two species showed opposite relationships with temperature variables. Fourteen ant species were characteristic of certain vegetation types and altitudes. Several of these species contributed to the differences between the assemblages. Main conclusions There are likely to be substantial and complex changes to ant assemblages as climates change in the northern Cape Floristic Region. Moreover, the importance of ants for ecosystem functioning suggests that these responses are not only likely to be a response solely to vegetation changes, but might also precipitate vegetation changes. The changes that are predicted to take place in the next 50 years in the Cape Floristic Region could be substantially exacerbated by such synergistic effects, which have major implications for long‐term conservation plans. Ongoing monitoring of this transect will reveal the nature and pace of the change as it unfolds.  相似文献   

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