2019
DOI: 10.3390/ani9050215
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Waste Disposal Sites as All-You-Can Eat Buffets for Carrion Crows (Corvus corone)

Abstract: In cities and densely populated areas, several corvid species are considered nuisance animals. In Austria, particularly carrion (Corvus corone) and hooded crows (C. cornix) are regarded as pests by the general public that frequently cause damage to crops, feed on human waste, and thus spread trash. We conducted a detailed one-year field survey to estimate the abundance of carrion crows in relation to potential anthropogenic food sources and reference sites in the Austrian Rhine valley. Our results demonstrated… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Although we cannot exclude the possibility that biogeographic differences such as lower crow abundance in the general Sapporo region than in the regions of the other zoos can explain this difference, our experience with Sapporo zoo suggests that the emergence of territoriality and aggression toward nonresident conspecifics induced by low food availability (see above) can at least partly explain the lower crow numbers. The limitation of anthropogenic food was suggested by Preininger et al () as a solution to reduce the number of crows at waste disposal sites. Finally, in cases when crows need to be captured for research or for translocation purposes, zoos may provide suitable places for trapping crows, taking into account any relevant national legislation regarding crow trapping (Kövér, Tóth, Lengyel, & Juhász, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although we cannot exclude the possibility that biogeographic differences such as lower crow abundance in the general Sapporo region than in the regions of the other zoos can explain this difference, our experience with Sapporo zoo suggests that the emergence of territoriality and aggression toward nonresident conspecifics induced by low food availability (see above) can at least partly explain the lower crow numbers. The limitation of anthropogenic food was suggested by Preininger et al () as a solution to reduce the number of crows at waste disposal sites. Finally, in cases when crows need to be captured for research or for translocation purposes, zoos may provide suitable places for trapping crows, taking into account any relevant national legislation regarding crow trapping (Kövér, Tóth, Lengyel, & Juhász, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many species have adapted to human‐transformed landscapes and some have even become dependent on urban resources (Kark, Iwaniuk, Schalimtzek, & Banker, ; Marzluff et al, ; Preininger, Schoas, Kramer, & Boeckle, ; Vuorisalo, Talvitie, Kauhala, Bläuer, & Lahtinen, ). Cities are a special ecosystem for their abiotic and biotic characteristics and their unique species composition (Bezzel, ; Fey, Vuorisalo, Lehikoinen, & Selonen, ; Parlange, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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