Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.

Structural elements for breeding such as nests are key resources for the conservation of bird populations. This is especially true when structural elements require a specific and restricted habitat, or if the construction of nests is costly in time and energy. The availability of nesting-platforms i...

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Main Authors: María V Jiménez-Franco, José E Martínez, José F Calvo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3981714?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ad302dde6d1c40128ff7dd2fb1e7e2162020-11-25T02:23:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0194e9362810.1371/journal.pone.0093628Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.María V Jiménez-FrancoJosé E MartínezJosé F CalvoStructural elements for breeding such as nests are key resources for the conservation of bird populations. This is especially true when structural elements require a specific and restricted habitat, or if the construction of nests is costly in time and energy. The availability of nesting-platforms is influenced by nest creation and persistence. In a Mediterranean forest in southeastern Spain, nesting-platforms are the only structural element for three forest-dwelling raptor species: booted eagle Aquila pennata, common buzzard Buteo buteo and northern goshawk Accipiter gentilis. From 1998 to 2013, we tracked the fate of 157 nesting-platforms built and reused by these species with the aim of determining the rates of creation and destruction of nesting-platforms, estimating nest persistence by applying two survival analyses, describing the pattern of nest reuse and testing the effects of nest use on breeding success. Nest creation and destruction rates were low (0.14 and 0.05, respectively). Using Kaplan Meier survival estimates and Cox proportional-hazards regression models we found that median nest longevity was 12 years and that this was not significantly affected by nest characteristics, nest-tree dimensions, nest-builder species, or frequency of use of the platform. We also estimated a transition matrix, considering the different stages of nest occupation (vacant or occupied by one of the focal species), to obtain the fundamental matrix and the average life expectancies of nests, which varied from 17.9 to 19.7 years. Eighty six percent of nests were used in at least one breeding attempt, 67.5% were reused and 17.8% were successively occupied by at least two of the study species. The frequency of nest use had no significant effects on the breeding success of any species. We conclude that nesting-platforms constitute an important resource for forest raptors and that their longevity is sufficiently high to allow their reuse in multiple breeding attempts.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3981714?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author María V Jiménez-Franco
José E Martínez
José F Calvo
spellingShingle María V Jiménez-Franco
José E Martínez
José F Calvo
Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
PLoS ONE
author_facet María V Jiménez-Franco
José E Martínez
José F Calvo
author_sort María V Jiménez-Franco
title Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
title_short Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
title_full Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
title_fullStr Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
title_full_unstemmed Lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
title_sort lifespan analyses of forest raptor nests: patterns of creation, persistence and reuse.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Structural elements for breeding such as nests are key resources for the conservation of bird populations. This is especially true when structural elements require a specific and restricted habitat, or if the construction of nests is costly in time and energy. The availability of nesting-platforms is influenced by nest creation and persistence. In a Mediterranean forest in southeastern Spain, nesting-platforms are the only structural element for three forest-dwelling raptor species: booted eagle Aquila pennata, common buzzard Buteo buteo and northern goshawk Accipiter gentilis. From 1998 to 2013, we tracked the fate of 157 nesting-platforms built and reused by these species with the aim of determining the rates of creation and destruction of nesting-platforms, estimating nest persistence by applying two survival analyses, describing the pattern of nest reuse and testing the effects of nest use on breeding success. Nest creation and destruction rates were low (0.14 and 0.05, respectively). Using Kaplan Meier survival estimates and Cox proportional-hazards regression models we found that median nest longevity was 12 years and that this was not significantly affected by nest characteristics, nest-tree dimensions, nest-builder species, or frequency of use of the platform. We also estimated a transition matrix, considering the different stages of nest occupation (vacant or occupied by one of the focal species), to obtain the fundamental matrix and the average life expectancies of nests, which varied from 17.9 to 19.7 years. Eighty six percent of nests were used in at least one breeding attempt, 67.5% were reused and 17.8% were successively occupied by at least two of the study species. The frequency of nest use had no significant effects on the breeding success of any species. We conclude that nesting-platforms constitute an important resource for forest raptors and that their longevity is sufficiently high to allow their reuse in multiple breeding attempts.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3981714?pdf=render
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