人工饲养计划的时空特性影响埃及秃鹫羽化后的活动

Korin Reznikov, Ron Efrat, Oded Berger-Tal, Nir Sapir
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引用次数: 0

摘要

过去几十年来,许多秃鹫种群数量严重下降,幼鸟死亡率很高。为了支持这些种群,人们使用饲养站来增加食物供应,并提供不含抗生素和有毒化合物的食物。然而,在饲养站提供食物可能会影响秃鹫的行为。我们进行了一项大规模野外实验,测试不同的食物供应方案如何影响埃及秃鹫(Neophron percnopterus)的活动。我们在 18 只秃鹫雏鸟身上安装了 GPS 发射器,并对它们羽化后的行动进行了描述。我们根据秃鹫巢穴附近喂食站的喂食方案将秃鹫分为三组:频繁且空间分散的食物供应组(FD);非频繁且空间分散的食物供应组(NFD);频繁且集中在一个地点的食物供应组(FC)。我们发现,随着雏鸟年龄的增长,所有三个组别的鸟类都增加了离巢的栖息距离,其中 NFD 组和 FC 组比 FD 组的增加幅度更大。此外,三组鸟的日飞行距离都有所增加,其中NFD组的增幅最大,FD组的增幅最小。我们的研究结果为饲喂站管理中的时空差异提供了新的见解,并显示了时空差异对鸟类生命早期阶段运动的影响,形成了两种主要的运动模式:本地运动和区域运动。我们的研究结果有助于根据长期和短期保护目标,决定最佳喂食方案,以鼓励或减少雏鸟的早期扩散距离。例如,雏鸟出壳后在已知和稳定的食物资源处的局部迁移可能会降低人为因素造成的死亡风险,但也可能会阻碍雏鸟的觅食、飞行和探索技能,影响其向未来繁殖地的扩散,从而对雏鸟的长期生存产生负面影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The spatiotemporal properties of artificial feeding schemes influence the post-fledging movement of Egyptian Vultures
Many vulture populations have severely declined in the past decades, showing high juvenile mortality. To support these populations, feeding stations are used to increase food availability and to supply food without antibiotics and toxic compounds. Yet, supplying food at feeding stations may affect vulture behavior. We present a large-scale field experiment testing how different food provision schemes affected the movement of Egyptian Vultures (Neophron percnopterus). We used GPS transmitters harnessed to 18 vulture chicks and described their movements post-fledging. We categorized the vultures into 3 groups according to the feeding scheme used at feeding stations near their nests: frequent and spatially dispersed food supply (FD); non-frequent and spatially dispersed food supply (NFD); and frequent food supply, concentrated in one location (FC). We found that birds from all three groups increased their roosting distances from the nest with fledgling age, with the NFD and FC groups showing a greater increase than the FD group. Additionally, all 3 groups increased their daily flight distances, with the NFD group presenting the largest increase and the FD group presenting the smallest increase. Our findings offer new insights into the relevance of spatiotemporal differences in the management of feeding stations and show its effect on movement during birds’ early life stages, creating 2 main movement patterns: local and regional. Our findings can help decide upon the preferable feeding scheme in a way that will either encourage or reduce the early dispersal distances of fledglings, according to long- and short-term conservation objectives. For example, local movements during the post fledging period to known and stable food resources may reduce the risk of anthropogenic-induced mortality, while it may negatively affect long-term survival by hindering foraging, flight, and exploring skills and affect dispersion to future breeding sites.
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