Vertebrate diet of the common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) and barn owl (Tyto alba) in rain-fed crops: implications to the pest control programs

2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ane Montoya ◽  
Xabier Cabodevilla ◽  
Juan Antonio Fargallo ◽  
Esther Biescas ◽  
Gregorio Mentaberre ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-31
Author(s):  
László Bank ◽  
László Haraszthy ◽  
Adrienn Horváth ◽  
Győző F. Horváth

Abstract In this study, the results of a long-term nest box installation program of the Common Barn-owl Tyto alba (Scopoli, 1769) in Southern Hungary were evaluated, which program was conducted during a 24-year period (1995–2018). The percentages of occupied nest boxes ranged from 9.72 to 73.44% in the first breeding periods while this varied between 0 and 41.46% in the case of repeated clutches in the same nest boxes with second broods. A total of 1,265 breeding attempts were recorded including 1,020 (80.63%) in the first and 245 (19.36%) in the second breeding periods, from which a total of 210 (16.6%) clutches did not produce any fledglings. The modal clutch size was 7 eggs in both first and second annual clutches. However, the value of productivity was higher in the case of larger clutch sizes and we found significant linear relationship between initial clutch size and fledgling production per nesting attempt in both breeding periods. Significant variation of reproductive parameters was observed among the years. The proportion of egg loss showed significant decline, while the change of hatching success and the variation of annual productivity showed significant slight positive linear trend during the 24 years. Our results suggested that despite the outlier values of reproduction characteristics in the extreme years with negative effect, a relatively stable Common Barn-owl population can be maintained by the placement of nest boxes in the investigated region.


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 262-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Ebmer ◽  
H.-P. Fuehrer ◽  
B. Eigner ◽  
H. Sattmann ◽  
A. Joachim

SummaryIn the framework of the biodiversity initiative and barcoding project “Austrian Barcode of Life” (ABOL) post mortem examinations of the gastro-intestinal tracts of different species of wild birds were carried out and several adult helminths were retrieved. In the gizzard of two barn owls (Tyto alba) and one common kestrel (Falco tinnuculus) acuariid nematodes belonging to the species Synhimantus (Synhimantus) laticeps (Rudolphi, 1819) were discovered. This report illustrates the identification of this parasitic nematode by morphometric comparison and scanning electron microscopic photographs. Furthermore, genetic identification of individual parasites based on a fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene and the nuclear 18S ribosomal RNA gene was carried out. This report constitutes the first COI-based DNA barcoding of S. (S.) laticeps and its first record in the barn owl (Tyto alba) in Austria.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-65
Author(s):  
Adrienn Horváth ◽  
László Bank ◽  
Győző F. Horváth

AbstractIn the present study, we analysed the variation of breeding parameters and the diet composition of the Common Barn-owl (Tyto alba) in three different demographic phases of the Common Vole (Microtus arvalis) in a complete population cycle between two outbreaks. The study was conducted in the south-eastern part of the Transdanubian region in South Hungary. For the analysis, we used data of 81 randomly selected first clutches from 2015 to 2019, a time period which represented a full demographic cycle of the Common Vole after the 2014 outbreak with an exceptionally high peak. We tested the impact of prey abundance and diversity of diet composition as continuous predictors as well as the demographic phase of Common Vole and the mesoregion as categorical explanatory variables on the measured reproductive outputs as response variables using Generalized Linear Models (GLM). Considering the breeding parameters, the number of fledglings, and fledging and reproductive success were significantly higher in the increase phase than during the vole crash phase. Based on GLM models, our results demonstrated that the clutch size of the Common Barn-owl is determined ultimately by the availability and consumption rate of the Common Vole as main prey, while other small mammal prey categories did not affect the clutch size. These results support the finding that the clutch size of vole-eating raptors and owls, which begin breeding periods in early spring predicts the vole abundance in this early spring period. Considering the other investigated small mammal prey groups, the alternative prey role was confirmed only in case of the Murid rodent prey categories (Apodemus spp., Muridae).


2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ján Obuch ◽  
Štefan Danko ◽  
Michal Noga

Abstract We completed data on the diet of the barn owl (Tyto alba) predominately from pellets for the period of the last 50 years from Slovakia. We analyzed material from 251 locations and 16 territorial units. The aggregate represents 119,231 pieces of prey from 47 species of mammals (Mammalia, 95.7%) and 58 species of birds (Aves, 3.9%), with a small representation of amphibians, reptiles (Amphibia and Reptilia, 0.2%) and invertebrates (Invertebrata, 0.2%). The obtaining of food among the owls is limited to synanthropic environments and the surrounding agricultural landscape, and the centre of its distribution in the recent period (i.e. the past 50 years: 1965-201 5) has been concentrated mainly on the southern parts of Slovakia. In this environment the common vole (Microtus arvalis, 59.6%) is the primary prey. Additional prey are rodents of the family Muridae: Mus musculus (5.6%), Micromys minutus (2.2%), Apodemus microps (2.2%), A. flavicollis (2.0%), A. sylvaticus (1 .6%) and A. agrarius (1 .5%); insectivores of the family Soricidae: Sorex araneus (6.2%), S. minutus (2.4%), Crocidura leucodon (4.8%) and C. suaveolens (2.8%); and the house sparrow Passer domesticus (2.9%). In the higher situated Turcianska kotlina Basin the species M. arvalis (74.3%) has higher domination, and instead of the white-toothed shrews the water shrews Neomys anomalus (2.8%) and N. fodiens (1 .3%) are more abundantly represented. In 3 localities owls focused on hunting bats; for example, in the church in Ratková the order Chiroptera made up 35.2% of prey. From the subrecent period (i.e. from before more than 50 years ago) we evaluate 4 samples from the territory of Slovakia with 15,601 pieces of prey ofT. alba. Before more than 50 years ago owls were also more abundantly represented at higher elevations in Slovakia, evidence of which is Weisz’s collection of pellets from 1 6 localities in the Ondavská vrchovina Upland in the years 1945 to 1963, but also a registry of data from the 19th and 20th centuries from higher located basins. In 4 samples of food from the subrecent period diversity in the representation of owl prey is higher, accompanied by low domination ofM. arvalis and a more abundant representation of murids from the genera Mus and Apodemus. The oldest sample, dated to the 16th century, is from a church in Žilina-Rudiny


1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 578-586 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Wayne Campbell ◽  
David A. Manuwal ◽  
Alton S. Harestad

The diet of the Common Barn-Owl, Tyto alba, in British Columbia was determined from analysis of 30 218 prey remains recovered from 11 787 pellets between 1941 and 1981. Small mammals were the main prey accounting for 98.0% of all remains, with rodents (80.1%) and insectivores (17.8%) the primary prey groups. Microtus townsendii accounted for nearly three-quarters of all prey and 84.3% of mammalian-prey biomass. Food habits varied among five geographical areas. Voles (Microtus spp.) and shrews (Sorex spp.) were primary and secondary prey, respectively, in all areas but Vancouver City, where Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus), house mice (Mus musculus), and birds (Columba livia, Sturnus vulgaris, and Passer domesticus) predominated. Microtus townsendii was the primary prey in all seasons (1973 and 1978), with autumn the season of highest numbers of voles. Other prey were inversely proportional to the incidence of microtines in the diet. Over 13 years, from 1967 to 1981, microtines accounted for between 65.3 and 84.5% of all prey items and their occurrence in the diet generally followed population trends of grassland mammals. A positive correlation between percent occurrence in the diet and population density was noted for the principal food, M. townsendii.


The Auk ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 105 (4) ◽  
pp. 699-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Haresign ◽  
Andrew Moiseff

Abstract The ability of the Common Barn-Owl (Tyto alba) to localize sounds produced by potential prey can be explained on the basis of sensitivity to differences in interaural time and intensity. The size of the owl's head is a prime determinant of interaural time differences, whereas the facial ruff is the prime determinant of interaural intensity differences. During the 60 days following hatching, the physical structures that establish these binaural cues undergo massive growth. Barn-owl chicks are altricial and scantily feathered when they hatch. Growth of the head and ruff feathers occur at separate times during early maturation. Between 11 and 30 days after hatching, the diameter of the head approximately doubles. Between 35 and 60 days, facial ruff feathers emerge and grow to nearly adult length (ca. 20 mm). During the first 60 days of life, the barn-owl auditory system would be subject to widely varying binaural cues which eventually stabilize.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
SEPRIDO SEPRIDO ◽  
MASHADI MASHADI

Research about the utilization of Tyto alba as rats pest control in oil palm plantations Regency of Kuantan Singingi was done in April-November 2018 in some palm oil plantations in the district of Kuantan Singingi. The methode  of this research followto The Barn Owl Protocol, Calculation of the population Tyto alba was directly in area of plantations, counting the number of the prey doing by installation of Camera Trap in artificial enclosure and types of the prey was analysis by skull of the prey in on pellets of Tyto alba. Results of this research show in Kuantan Singingi Regency, The utilization of Tyto alba  is still used internally by large private oil palm Plantation, one of Them is PT. Tribakti Sarimas (PT. TBS). On PT. TBS’S oil palm plantations has been using as whole by making a artificial enclosure (Nestbox) 3.000 Unit since 2012 year which spread a cage of for 25 ha on the estate’s core. About 85% of whom had been inhabited by Tyto alba with the evidence she had met the presence of eggs, chicks and eggs have shells.


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