Recent trends in the European Black StorkCiconia nigra population are geographically distinct: range expansion and adaptation to human activity dominate in western and central Europe, while declines-probably induced by landscape change-are reported in the east. We studied the large Lithuanian Black Stork population in the transition zone to explore whether, and how, the detrimental influences of recent Baltic landscape changes are balanced by the West European tendency of behavioural adaptation to human activity. Based on monitoring in sample plots, the current population was estimated at 650-950 pairs, indicating a significant decrease (possibly over 20%) during the last two decades. In comparison to the Latvian and Estonian populations, however, this decline is smaller, and the reproductive success remains at a high level [66% breeding success and 2.99 ± 0.97 (SD) fledglings per successful attempt, [2000][2001][2002][2003][2004][2005][2006]; this north-south gradient suggests a climate-mediated impact of habitat degradation in the Baltic countries. The storks are also nesting closer to forest edges and in younger stands than 15-30 years ago, which has probably reduced the nest-tree limitation, as indicated by an increased use of large oaks. Thus, habitat degradation and adaptation seem to be taking place simultaneously in the Lithuanian Black Stork population, as was expected from its geographical location. In general, our study supports the view that, whenever possible, species conservation strategies and the use of indicator species should be geographically explicit.
The processes of competition and predation determine the degree to which species can coexist; the importance of competition in particular has been emphasized at high trophic levels. Competition exclusion will occur when habitat overlap between sympatric species is high. In this study, we investigated nesting habitat overlap between internationally protected diurnal tree-nesting avian predators of central Europe, namely, White-tailed Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla), Lesser Spotted Eagle (Aquila pomarina), Black Stork (Ciconia nigra), and Osprey (Pandion haliaetus). We found significantly different nesting habitats among the study species and suggest that this could be a consequence of the resource-based segregation, but not a consequence of asymmetrical interspecific competition. The results also show that habitat of the recovering populations of White-tailed Eagle overlapped with the habitat used by the Lesser Spotted Eagle, Black Stork, and Osprey to varying extents with a niche overlap values being below the competition exclusion threshold. Nevertheless, we suggest that competition by White-tailed Eagle at a population level may limit Osprey, though not Lesser Spotted Eagle or Black Stork.
Animal home‐ranges are expressions of the biology and ecology of a species, and their size is often considered to be a proxy for habitat quality. Understanding the factors affecting variation in home‐range size may aid prediction of the impact of local or global environmental change on studied populations. To this end, we established an international collaborative programme to gather GPS telemetry data on the Lesser Spotted Eagle Clanga pomarina across a large part of its range. The breeding season home‐ranges of 58 individuals from Estonia, Lithuania, Poland, Hungary and Romania were estimated using autocorrelated kernel density estimation. Differences in home‐range size were analysed using linear mixed‐effects models incorporating global (latitude, longitude, climate) and local (habitat heterogeneity, land cover, topography, human disturbance) variables. Home‐range was significantly affected by habitat heterogeneity, vegetation cover and human disturbance, and also by climate, increasing with greater temperature seasonality. A quadratic relationship between home‐range and Shannon diversity index, found in males, suggests that Eagles use less space in the least and most diverse habitats. Home‐ranges were also smaller close to human settlements, but range size was positively correlated with human population density. The first result reflects the positive influence of agricultural management on prey availability, whereas the second reflects negative impacts of disturbance and loss of foraging space. Home‐ranges of male Eagles were relatively consistent in size and were more linked to environmental conditions compared with those of females. Female home‐ranges were significantly more variable in size and showed less distinctive patterns of relationship with the tested predictors. Sex‐dependent variation in home‐range may result from the different roles of males and females in breeding activities and territoriality limitations of males. The latter factor both limited and increased the home‐range size in different individuals.
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