montagu’s harrier
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Author(s):  
Brigitte Berger-Geiger ◽  
Georg Heine ◽  
Ajayrama Kumaraswamy ◽  
C. Giovanni Galizia

AbstractThe ground nesting raptor Montagu’s Harrier breeds in loose colonies in cereal fields in the Spanish Extremadura. It is unclear how and whether birds in different colonies interact and how harriers spend time before and after nesting, before starting migration. We used GPS–GSM tags deployed on ten females and three males, some over multiple seasons, to follow bird movements with unprecedented detail. Arriving from spring migration, all males and most females returned to their old nest site, and spent between 13 and 25 days in mate choice and local site inspection. During incubation and early nesting female movements were strongly reduced, but increased significantly during late nesting and post-fledging periods. After fledging or after breeding failure, females increased their flying radius. Some of them visited other colonies, for single days or for longer periods, or flew long distances within Spain. These visits might have included help in breeding attempts of other pairs (adoptions). Four out of six females returned to their own breeding site before starting migration. Several females repeatedly used common roosts in this phase. Non-breeding females were active in defending nests in the colony against predators. Females with successful brood initiated migration earlier and spent less time in Spain than non-breeders or those with predated nests. Unlike females, daily distances in males were more uniform. While all males remained in the breeding area for the entire season, their activity centres shifted more within that area than those of females.


2021 ◽  
pp. 229-239
Author(s):  
J. Crespo ◽  
J. Jiménez ◽  
A. Martínez–Abraín

We studied the rapid decline in the number of breeding pairs (geometric growth rate λ = 0.86; 14 % annual decrease) of a semi–colonial ground–nesting bird of prey, the Montagu’s harrier (Circus pygargus), after twelve years of rapid population growth (λ = 1.15; 15 % rate of annual increase) in a protected coastal wetland in Eastern Spain. The study was conducted from 1992–2017, and the range of values in population size was: 2–37 breeding pairs. We contrasted 20 biologically–sound hypotheses (including local and regional factors) to explain the trend over time in the annual number of pairs. The most parsimonious model included a surrogate of wild boar (Sus scrofa) density in the region during the previous year and the annual number of Montagu’s harrier pairs breeding inland in the study province during the focal year. Syntopic western marsh harriers (C. aeruginosus) were not found to have any effect on the numbers of Montagu’s harriers either in our modelling or when we performed a quantitative and qualitative study both for years t and t–1. Our final ‘best’ models did not include spring rainfall, regional forest fires or local land use changes. The impact of wild boars on breeding success, together with conspecific attraction, could have resulted in the dispersal of coastal wetland birds to larger populations in dense inland shrub lands where levels of wild boar nest predation were more likely lower


Author(s):  
Dominik Krupiński ◽  
Dorota Kotowska ◽  
Mariano R. Recio ◽  
Michał Żmihorski ◽  
Przemysław Obłoza ◽  
...  

AbstractAgriculture intensification drives changes in bird populations but also in the space use by farmland species. Agriculture in Eastern Europe still follows an extensive farming model, but due to policy shifts aimed at rural restructuring and implementation of government subsidies for farmers, it is being rapidly intensified. Here, we aimed to document the ranging behaviour and habitat use of a declining farmland bird of prey—Montagu’s Harrier—and to compare it to findings from Western Europe. In 2011–2018, 50 individuals were followed with GPS loggers in Eastern Poland to study species spatial ecology. We found home ranges (kernel 90%) to be considerably large: 67.3 (± 42.3) km2 in case of males, but only 4.9 (± 6.1) km2 in females. Home ranges overlapped by 40%, on average, with other males in colonies and by 61%, on average, between consecutive breeding seasons of a particular male. The average daily distance travelled by males and females reached, respectively, 94.5 and 45.3 km, covering a daily home range of 32.3 and 3.1 km2. Individuals foraged up to 35 km from nests (3.5 km on average). Daily distance travelled and daily home ranges varied across the breeding season, in case of females being shortest in July, but sharply increasing in August. Also, individuals with breeding success had higher daily distance travelled but smaller daily home ranges. Average harriers’ distance to nest was generally increasing over the season, but was also changing over time of day: birds were closest to nest during night time, but at the end of the season, males roosted up to 16 km from the nest. While foraging males slightly preferred grasslands, higher elevation and smaller land-use patches, they avoided slopes and proximity of roads. We conclude that the surprisingly large home ranges of breeding harriers may suggest reduced prey availability or high fragmentation of hunting areas, both driving birds to utilise large areas and potentially contributing to population decline.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 16620-16621
Author(s):  
Suman Pratihar ◽  
Niloy Mandal

One Montagu’s Harrier Circus pygargus subadult female was identified and photographed in December, 2019 in West Bengal, India.  This is the first record from the state.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaume Orta ◽  
Eduardo de Juana ◽  
Peter F. D. Boesman ◽  
Jeffrey S. Marks ◽  
Ernest Garcia

2020 ◽  
Vol 145 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jarosław Wiącek

Over a period of almost twenty years, clutch size and breeding success in the Montagu’s Harrier were investigated in the context of changing environmental conditions in the species’ natural breeding habitats in eastern Poland. During the study periods (1990-95 and 2003-12) a decline was noted in the number of breeding pairs in the population nesting on the calcareous peat bogs near Chełm, not far from the Polish-Ukrainian border. Statistically significant differences in breeding parameters between the two periods were also observed. In the first period clutch volumes were greater, as the dimensions of the individual eggs were larger; additionally, more eggs hatched and the hatchling survival rate was higher. Some habitat conditions were different in the two periods, with the water level and height of vegetation near the nests being lower in the second period. The harriers’ food in the two study periods fluctuated strongly with regard to the content of small mammals and compensatory items. In the second period a distinct increase in predator pressure was noted. Pressure from terrestrial predators diminished whereas that from aerial predators increased. Broods in semi-colonies, where birds actively defended their nests, enjoyed a higher rate of survival, as did nests situated far in from the edge of peat bogs. The results suggest that the decline in breeding numbers was driven by increased predation, which was in turn a consequence of habitat changes in the natural environment of eastern Poland.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-218
Author(s):  
Nuno Onofre

Data on Montagu’s Harrier biology was gathered in 1992 during a broader survey on birds of prey in the region of Castro Verde, during which pellets and prey remains were harvested in order to study their diet. Main land-use of the study area was extensive cereal crops with fallow fields. A total of 143 pellets collected in perches were analyzed and 1351 items were counted. Invertebrates were the main prey in number (97.2%) and biomass (32.9%). Birds and mammals were also important prey in terms of biomass (30.2 and 28%, respectively), despite its low numbers in relation to all identified prey (4.3 and 1.3%, respectively). Prey weighing less than 30 g were the most frequent (98.1%) with a corresponding biomass of around 62.1%. For prey weighing more than 100 g only Lagomorphs contributed to it, totaling 25% in terms of biomass, despite their remarkably low numbers (0.4% of total prey). This high predation on invertebrates while low on mammals agrees, with the known latitudinal trends of diet composition of the Montagu’s Harrier, and some other birds of prey, along the Palearctic. In this part of Iberia, where large orthopterans are particularly common in extensive cereal fields, strong presence of insects was found in the diet of Montagu’s Harrier populations. This feature seems to be related to the abundance of orthopterans in southern Europe.


2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliette Rabdeau ◽  
Isabelle Badenhausser ◽  
Jérôme Moreau ◽  
Vincent Bretagnolle ◽  
Karine Monceau

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