{"title":"Wintering Great White Egrets <i>Ardea alba</i> in a riverine area in the Netherlands: numbers, abundance and timing","authors":"Rob Lensink, Paul van Els","doi":"10.1080/00063657.2023.2264559","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTCapsule The riverine area in the Netherlands is an important wintering area for Great White Egrets Ardea alba. Numbers decline in relation to very cold weather, and increase in relation to peaks in population cycles of Common Vole Microtus arvalis.Aim To analyse the variation in abundance and timing of wintering Great White Egrets between years and roosts.Methods The study area was a 21,000 ha section of the riverine area between the rivers Meuse and Waal. The paper presents the results of eight years of weekly counts of three roosts, one year of 10 roosts and seven years of nearly daily counts of foraging birds in an agricultural landscape. All surveys were carried out outside the breeding season.Results Birds used the area from the end of June until the beginning of April. Abundance strongly varied with small rodent prey availability, with maxima between 15 and 50 birds in years with average prey abundance, and a maximum of 125 individuals in 2019/2020 when prey availability was high. Since most birds foraged on grassland, this suggests a density of two birds per 100 ha in normal years and eight birds per 100 ha in peak years. Each roost covers a foraging area of 2000 ha in total, or 1000 ha grassland. Mean densities were similar between years but there was seasonal variation, with most roost counts peaking during autumn. Birds would temporarily leave the area during spells of snow or frost. In spring, departure towards the breeding grounds was partly dependent on the mean temperature in March.Conclusion Counts of Great White Egrets at roosting and foraging sites in the Netherlands vary seasonally with temperature and prey availability. AcknowledgementsThanks to the conservation organisations Gelders Landschap & Kastelen (André Bonte) and Staatsbosbeheer (Tymen van Heerde) for permission to do field work on their properties. Thanks to Ecco Smit and Roy Sluis, who participated in the counts at Ewijk and Wezelse Plas, and to Ton Ebben for doing counts during my holidays. Also thanks to Astrid Potiek for her critical review of an earlier draft and Job de Jong for preparing the map and calculating land use in Maas & Waal (both Bureau Waardenburg).Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).","PeriodicalId":55353,"journal":{"name":"Bird Study","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Bird Study","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/00063657.2023.2264559","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ORNITHOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACTCapsule The riverine area in the Netherlands is an important wintering area for Great White Egrets Ardea alba. Numbers decline in relation to very cold weather, and increase in relation to peaks in population cycles of Common Vole Microtus arvalis.Aim To analyse the variation in abundance and timing of wintering Great White Egrets between years and roosts.Methods The study area was a 21,000 ha section of the riverine area between the rivers Meuse and Waal. The paper presents the results of eight years of weekly counts of three roosts, one year of 10 roosts and seven years of nearly daily counts of foraging birds in an agricultural landscape. All surveys were carried out outside the breeding season.Results Birds used the area from the end of June until the beginning of April. Abundance strongly varied with small rodent prey availability, with maxima between 15 and 50 birds in years with average prey abundance, and a maximum of 125 individuals in 2019/2020 when prey availability was high. Since most birds foraged on grassland, this suggests a density of two birds per 100 ha in normal years and eight birds per 100 ha in peak years. Each roost covers a foraging area of 2000 ha in total, or 1000 ha grassland. Mean densities were similar between years but there was seasonal variation, with most roost counts peaking during autumn. Birds would temporarily leave the area during spells of snow or frost. In spring, departure towards the breeding grounds was partly dependent on the mean temperature in March.Conclusion Counts of Great White Egrets at roosting and foraging sites in the Netherlands vary seasonally with temperature and prey availability. AcknowledgementsThanks to the conservation organisations Gelders Landschap & Kastelen (André Bonte) and Staatsbosbeheer (Tymen van Heerde) for permission to do field work on their properties. Thanks to Ecco Smit and Roy Sluis, who participated in the counts at Ewijk and Wezelse Plas, and to Ton Ebben for doing counts during my holidays. Also thanks to Astrid Potiek for her critical review of an earlier draft and Job de Jong for preparing the map and calculating land use in Maas & Waal (both Bureau Waardenburg).Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
期刊介绍:
Bird Study publishes high quality papers relevant to the sphere of interest of the British Trust for Ornithology: broadly defined as field ornithology; especially when related to evidence-based bird conservation. Papers are especially welcome on: patterns of distribution and abundance, movements, habitat preferences, developing field census methods, ringing and other techniques for marking and tracking birds.
Bird Study concentrates on birds that occur in the Western Palearctic. This includes research on their biology outside of the Western Palearctic, for example on wintering grounds in Africa. Bird Study also welcomes papers from any part of the world if they are of general interest to the broad areas of investigation outlined above.
Bird Study publishes the following types of articles:
-Original research papers of any length
-Short original research papers (less than 2500 words in length)
-Scientific reviews
-Forum articles covering general ornithological issues, including non-scientific ones
-Short feedback articles that make scientific criticisms of papers published recently in the Journal.