Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.

Anthropogenic landscapes can be rich in resources, and may in some cases provide potential habitat for species whose natural habitat has declined. We used remote videography to assess whether reintroducing individuals of the threatened New Zealand falcon Falco novaeseelandiae into a highly modified...

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Main Authors: Sara M Kross, Jason M Tylianakis, Ximena J Nelson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3375302?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-12da075257164ed0828bbea3f1fd8bb12020-11-25T02:19:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0176e3867910.1371/journal.pone.0038679Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.Sara M KrossJason M TylianakisXimena J NelsonAnthropogenic landscapes can be rich in resources, and may in some cases provide potential habitat for species whose natural habitat has declined. We used remote videography to assess whether reintroducing individuals of the threatened New Zealand falcon Falco novaeseelandiae into a highly modified agricultural habitat affected the feeding rates of breeding falcons or related breeding behavior such as nest attendance and brooding rates. Over 2,800 recording hours of footage were used to compare the behavior of falcons living in six natural nests (in unmanaged, hilly terrain between 4 km and 20 km from the nearest vineyard), with that of four breeding falcon pairs that had been transported into vineyards and nested within 500 m of the nearest vineyard. Falcons in vineyard nests had higher feeding rates, higher nest attendance, and higher brooding rates. As chick age increased, parents in vineyard nests fed chicks a greater amount of total prey and larger prey items on average than did parents in hill nests. Parents with larger broods brought in larger prey items and a greater total sum of prey biomass. Nevertheless, chicks in nests containing siblings received less daily biomass per individual than single chicks. Some of these results can be attributed to the supplementary feeding of falcons in vineyards. However, even after removing supplementary food from our analysis, falcons in vineyards still fed larger prey items to chicks than did parents in hill nests, suggesting that the anthropogenic habitat may be a viable source of quality food. Although agricultural regions globally are rarely associated with raptor conservation, these results suggest that translocating New Zealand falcons into vineyards has potential for the conservation of this species.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3375302?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara M Kross
Jason M Tylianakis
Ximena J Nelson
spellingShingle Sara M Kross
Jason M Tylianakis
Ximena J Nelson
Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sara M Kross
Jason M Tylianakis
Ximena J Nelson
author_sort Sara M Kross
title Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
title_short Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
title_full Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
title_fullStr Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
title_full_unstemmed Translocation of threatened New Zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
title_sort translocation of threatened new zealand falcons to vineyards increases nest attendance, brooding and feeding rates.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Anthropogenic landscapes can be rich in resources, and may in some cases provide potential habitat for species whose natural habitat has declined. We used remote videography to assess whether reintroducing individuals of the threatened New Zealand falcon Falco novaeseelandiae into a highly modified agricultural habitat affected the feeding rates of breeding falcons or related breeding behavior such as nest attendance and brooding rates. Over 2,800 recording hours of footage were used to compare the behavior of falcons living in six natural nests (in unmanaged, hilly terrain between 4 km and 20 km from the nearest vineyard), with that of four breeding falcon pairs that had been transported into vineyards and nested within 500 m of the nearest vineyard. Falcons in vineyard nests had higher feeding rates, higher nest attendance, and higher brooding rates. As chick age increased, parents in vineyard nests fed chicks a greater amount of total prey and larger prey items on average than did parents in hill nests. Parents with larger broods brought in larger prey items and a greater total sum of prey biomass. Nevertheless, chicks in nests containing siblings received less daily biomass per individual than single chicks. Some of these results can be attributed to the supplementary feeding of falcons in vineyards. However, even after removing supplementary food from our analysis, falcons in vineyards still fed larger prey items to chicks than did parents in hill nests, suggesting that the anthropogenic habitat may be a viable source of quality food. Although agricultural regions globally are rarely associated with raptor conservation, these results suggest that translocating New Zealand falcons into vineyards has potential for the conservation of this species.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3375302?pdf=render
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AT jasonmtylianakis translocationofthreatenednewzealandfalconstovineyardsincreasesnestattendancebroodingandfeedingrates
AT ximenajnelson translocationofthreatenednewzealandfalconstovineyardsincreasesnestattendancebroodingandfeedingrates
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