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Wading bird use of established and newly created reactor cooling reservoirs at the Savannah River Site,near Aiken,South Carolina,USA
Authors:Bildstein  Keith L  Gawlik  Dale E  Ferral  Dan P  Brisbin  I Lehr  Wein  Gary R
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Winthrop College, 29733 Rock Hill, South Carolina, USA;(2) Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, 29802, P.O. Drawer E, Aiken, South Carolina, USA;(3) Department of Biology, Memphis State University, 38152 Memphis, Tennessee, USA;(4) Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, RR2 Box 191, 19529 Kempton, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract:We compared wading bird use of a newly created 405-ha reactor cooling reservoir (L-Lake) at the Savannah River Site, near Aiken, South Carolina, with that of two similar > 25-year-old reservoirs (1130-ha Par Pond and 87-ha Pond B) at the same site. L-Lake was constructed in 1984–1985 and filled in late 1985. Approximately 25% of the shoreline of L-Lake was planted with lacustrine vegetation in early 1987 in an attempt to speed the establishment of a self-sustaining balanced biological community (BBC) at the reservoir. Even so, during the course of our studies, L-Lake had considerably less wetland vegetation, especially floating-leaved species such as yellow nelumbo (Nelumbo lutea), than did either of the two older reservoirs.Sixty-three surveys of the avian communities using the three reservoirs were conducted between fall of 1987 and summer of 1989. These surveys indicated that (1) at least seven species of wading birds (order: Ciconiiformes) used L-Lake, (2) wading bird density was higher at L-Lake than at the other two reservoirs, (3) wading birds represented a higher proportion of the total avian community at L-Lake than at the other two, older reservoirs, and (4) wading birds at L-Lake used planted portions of the shoreline more than unplanted portions. We suggest that the inter-reservoir differences we observed represent a lsquotrophic upsurgersquo (sensu O'Brien, 1990) resulting from the increased availability of fishes at L-Lake compared with the two older reservoirs.Work was performed at the University of Georgia's Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, Aiken, South Carolina 29802.
Keywords:Wading birds  Ciconiiformes  reservoirs  lacustrine vegetation  wetland vegetation  macrophytes  standing dead timber  fishes  predator-prey interactions
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