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101.
Human impacts alter landscapes with consequences for the distribution and availability of high-quality food resources to populations inhabiting those landscapes, which may impact on the reproductive output of individuals in those populations. The sensitivity of wild populations to changes in food resources may vary among stages of the annual cycle. For example, in birds, effects are likely to be greater during costly stages such as egg production. Here we compare assimilated diet (from stable isotope analysis of chick feathers) and egg traits (egg size, shape, eggshell colour and maculation, using pattern-analysis software) in Herring Gulls Larus argentatus, across seven colonies in southwest Scotland and Northern Ireland. The Herring Gull is an opportunistic, generalist forager on both marine and terrestrial resources which frequently exploits anthropogenic food sources such as fishery discards and human refuse. We found that larger eggs were laid in colonies where females consumed either a higher proportion of marine resources or terrestrial resources; smaller eggs were laid in colonies where females had an intermediate diet. In colonies where females consumed more marine items, they also laid eggs with higher maculation (intensity and size of spots) compared with colonies where females mainly consumed terrestrial food. We also found smaller and more pointed eggs, suggestive of resource shortages, in larger colonies. Generalist foragers are often thought to have the capacity to buffer themselves against changes in the food web, provided that enough alternative food is available. However, this study highlights that specializing on the most profitable or available resources has consequences for egg traits even in an opportunistic generalist forager exploiting a large range of habitats. If variation in egg traits is related to reproductive output, then understanding the impact of assimilated diet on reproduction early in the breeding season can provide important insights into how populations will respond to landscapes altered by human impact.  相似文献   
102.
For most of the 20th century, the tidal reaches of the River Tyne in northeast England were used as an open sewer for organic wastes from almost a million people. This produced anaerobic conditions in the river, but supplied an appreciable source of food for five species of gulls. Observations on the number of gulls using the river were made in 1969/70 to establish the situation before a sewage treatment scheme was implemented. By 1994, the volume of untreated sewage discharged into the river had been reduced by 97% and by 86% in the study area, and a second survey was carried out to evaluate the effect of the clean-up on gull numbers. Overall, gull numbers showed a significant decrease of 37% between the two study periods. The decrease in winter was 38% and was also significant, while the decline in summer was 33%, but not significant. Considering individual species, numbers of Common and Great Black-backed Gulls declined by 93% and 91% respectively. In both these cases this is presumed to be due to the decline in available food. Black-headed Gull numbers did not change significantly and it appears they have been able to find alternative feeding sites such as mud flats exposed at low tide and the outfall where treated effluent is discharged. Numbers of Lesser Black-backed Gulls and Kittiwakes rose dramatically as a result of increases in breeding numbers in the area. Neither species feeds along the river. Numbers of Herring Gulls did not change significantly — it is likely that the effect of the decline in food availability was masked by the increase in breeding numbers in towns along the river banks. The different response of each of the species of gulls indicates the differences in their ecology and breeding status in the area.  相似文献   
103.
Social parasitic Hymenopterans have evolved morphological, chemical, and behavioral adaptations to overcome the sophisticated recognition and defense systems of their social host to invade host nests and exploit their worker force. In bumblebees, social parasitism appeared in at least 3 subgenera independently: in the subgenus Psithyrus consisting entirely of parasitic species, in the subgenus Alpinobombus with Bombus hyperboreus, and in the subgenus Thoracobombus with B. inexspectatus. Cuckoo bumblebee males utilize species‐specific cephalic labial gland secretions for mating purposes that can impact their inquiline strategy. We performed cephalic labial gland secretions in B. hyperboreus, B. inexspectatus and their hosts. Males of both parasitic species exhibited high species specific levels of cephalic gland secretions, including different main compounds. Our results showed no chemical mimicry in the cephalic gland secretions between inquilines and their host and we did not identify the repellent compounds already known in other cuckoo bumblebees.  相似文献   
104.
105.
In long-lived species, any negative effect of pollution on adult survival may pose serious hazards to breeding populations. In this study, we measured concentrations of various organochlorines (OCs) (polychlorinated biphenyl and OC pesticides) in the blood of a large number of adult glaucous gulls (Larus hyperboreus) breeding on Bjørnøya (Bear Island) in the Norwegian Arctic, and modelled their local survival using capture–recapture analysis. Survival was negatively associated with concentrations of OCs in the blood. The effect of OCs was nonlinear and evident only among birds with the highest concentrations (the uppermost deciles of contamination). The threshold for depressed survival differed between the sexes, with females being more sensitive to contamination. For birds with lower OC concentration, survival was very high, i.e. at the upper range of survival rates reported from glaucous and other large gull species in other, presumably less contaminated populations. We propose two non-exclusive explanations. First, at some threshold of OC concentration, parents (especially males) may abandon reproduction to maximize their own survival. Second, high contamination of OC may eliminate the most sensitive individuals from the population (especially among females), inducing a strong selection towards high-quality and less sensitive phenotypes.  相似文献   
106.
L.J. Lewis  T.C. Kelly 《Bird Study》2013,60(3):354-360
The effects of algal mats on wintering wading bird distribution and behaviour were studied at two sites during 1998/99 to identify changes that occurred during the winter breakdown of the algal mat. Numbers of Black-tailed Godwit Limosa limosa did not increase as the algal mat reduced in extent but a significantly greater number of birds were observed in areas without algal cover than in areas with mats in most months. The use of clear spaces, created between the algal patches as the mat broke down, by Black-tailed Godwit increased across the winter. We suggest that algal mats may physically interfere with the deep probing action of this wader. In contrast, when algal mats were most dense in November 1998, significantly greater numbers of Redshank Tringa totanus were observed in algal areas at one site. Redshank appeared not to be deterred by algal cover and, at times, preferentially utilized the algal infauna as prey.  相似文献   
107.
108.
For birds that breed in large colonies, the overall area occupied by the colony generally comprises several sub-areas that differ in physical and social features such as vegetation and breeding density. Birds arriving at a breeding colony select their nesting sites through a hierarchical process of selecting a sub-area, then a particular nest site with appropriate biotic and physical attributes. Optimal vegetation cover is one such important attribute. Many ground nesting gulls preferentially select nest sites that provide shelter during reproduction, but this presumably has to be balanced against any costs such as reduced visibility of potential predators. The effects of vegetation height in the sub-areas within a colony, and of the amount of vegetation in the immediate vicinity of the nest on nest microclimate were investigated in lesser black-backed gulls Larus fuscus in a colony in which overall vegetation height differed in different sub-areas and was patchily distributed within these areas. Tall vegetation did have a sheltering effect, and this was positively related with chick growth. However, this vegetation area was associated with lower breeding densities, relatively late laying birds and lower chick survival rate, suggesting that sub-areas with tall vegetation held more lower-quality or young breeders. Within the sub-areas, the birds preferentially selected nest sites with more surrounding vegetation, and this was positively correlated with their hatching success.  相似文献   
109.
Since 1981, when the first breeding pair of Mediterranean Gull Larus melanocephalus was recorded in Poland, the population of this gull has increased considerably. Its population size was stable until 1997, not exceeding ten pairs annually; thereafter, an increasing number of sightings were made, and during the last 5 years between 26 and 39 breeding pairs have been recorded in Poland. To date, breeding sites have been established in a total of 45 sites (maximum of 19 sites in a given year), with 27% of these (43% of all broods) found on islands located in the middle course of the Vistula River. Breeding sites have also included artificial reservoirs, such as dam reservoirs (20% of sites, 19% of broods), gravel pits (9% of sites, 13% of broods) and fishponds (24% of places, 8% of broods). Mediterranean Gulls were found to nest only within the colonies of other Laridae. Single pairs were recorded at 40% of the breeding sites, whereas a maximum of two to five pairs were recorded at 47% of the other sites. The great majority of breeding attempts were recorded in Black-headed Gull L. ridibundus colonies. In two cases, Mediterranean Gulls bred within mono-specific colonies of Common Gulls L. canus consisting of 60–150 pairs. The biggest concentrations of breeding sites were along the middle course of the Vistula river and in the southern part of Poland.  相似文献   
110.
No evidence for extra-pair paternity in the western gull   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The genetic mating system of western gulls Larus occidentalis breeding on Southeast Farallon Island, California, was determined using multilocus DNA fingerprints of 33 chicks from 22 broods. No extra-pair paternity (EPP) was found, despite extra-pair copulations (EPCs) occurring. This suggests that paternity guards are effective, and that females gain few genetic benefits from EPCs. The EPP in western gulls concurs with that of other seabirds, reinforcing the idea that seabirds generally have a monogamous genetic mating system.  相似文献   
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