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1. |
BIRDS OF THE UNDERSTORY OF LAKE‐SHORE FORESTS ON THE ENTEBBE PENINSULA, UGANDA |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 1-13
Nathan O. Okia,
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摘要:
SummaryMonthly mist‐netting of low‐flying forest birds was conducted in three lake‐shore forests in southern Uganda from September 1970 to July 1972. It was found that the edge of the forest formed a distinct ecological barrier that was rarely crossed by species on either side of it. Catches were concentrated in the hours of daylight, in two peaks, a morning peak at 09.00 hrs and an afternoon peak at 16.00 hrs (sun‐time) for all birds combined, although there were slight species differences. Most bird species were found to be sedentary in a fixed home‐range, and covered lateral distances of up toc.300 m. No movement between the different forests was recorded.The most common birds such as bulbuls were often caught at heights between 0·6 and 1·8 m above the ground, but the upper limit of their vertical range was not determined. It is suggested that the bi‐modality of flight activity may be intrinsic, even though it may be correlated with such extrinsic factors as light and radiation. On a month to month basis, the numbers of birds caught reflected breeding and moult activity. This was best shown by the Pygmy Kingfisher, taken in higher numbers towards the end of the first rainy season when a majority of the birds caught were young and many birds were moulting the remiges. On the other hand higher numbers of Olive Sunbird were found during the second rainy season, again at a time corresponding to a general moulting of remiges. The bulbuls showed fluctuations in numbers caught that were matched by an equally fluctuating pattern of moult. The role of food as a possible limiting factor in bird breeding
ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02007.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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2. |
BREEDING OF THE WHITE‐BACKED AND RÜPPELL'S GRIFFON VULTURES,GYPS AFRICANUSANDG. RUEPPELLII |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 14-40
D. C. Houston,
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摘要:
SummaryThe breeding season of two species of griffon vultures are described. Rüppell's Griffon Vulture lays 2–3 months earlier than the White‐backed Griffon. Young birds were hand‐reared to determine their food requirements during growth; these estimates were combined with the food requirements of adult birds to make an estimate of the amount of food a parent bird needs to obtain when it is rearing young. The amount of food actually obtained by a group of birds was recorded from the size of the crops of birds returning to the breeding colony in the afternoon. The comparison of the estimates of the food obtained and the food required through the breeding season suggested that there may be a period during rearing when there was insufficient food available to satisfy the food requirements of both chick and adult. Chicks were found to have a very high survival rate and were probably receiving sufficient food. Presumably adult birds were not therefore receiving sufficient food, and the examination of a sample of adult birds for body condition through the breeding season showed a clear decline in their fat deposits. It was considered that in both species, breeding was timed so that the young left the nest at a period in the year when food conditions were good and the young birds could feed with little competition from adults. The parent birds therefore had to rear young during a season in the year when food conditions were not always adequate and they had to rely on utilising fat reserves. The food conditions for vultures during this study were probably favourable and during years of food shortage breeding may become impossible, or restricted to the most aggressive and dominant indiv
ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02008.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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3. |
SEXUAL DIMORPHISM AND DIVERGENCE IN WINTER FORAGING BEHAVIOUR OF THREE‐TOED WOODPECKERSPICOIDES TRIDACTYLUS |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 41-50
Olav Hogstad,
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摘要:
SummaryMeasurements of 48 males and 45 females of Three‐toed Woodpeckers shot in Norway revealed that the mean lengths of wing, tail, bill and tarsus of males were significantly greater than those of females. Sexual dimorphism was most marked for the bill and tarsus.Feeding observations of the species from spruce‐dominated mixed forests during the October‐March period indicated an intersexual partitioning of the foraging niche. The males exhibited a stereotyped foraging pattern of bark scaling low down on the main trunks of dead spruce, whilst females used a more differentiated feeding technique and utilized a greater variety of trunk and branch sizes of dead, decaying and living trees of several different species. Significant intersexual differences were found in tree height preference and in the diameter of trunks and branches. The males foraged almost exclusively on the trunks of trees over 10 m high and over 15 cm in diameter, whilst females often frequented dead spruce, under 5 m high, and foraged on thinner trunks and branches. Foraging height was significantly lower for males than for females.The relationship between the sexual dimorphism, the intersexual partitioning of the feeding niche and their biological significance, is briefly disc
ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02009.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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4. |
BREEDING BIOLOGY OF THE GREY‐FACED PETRELPTERODROMA MACROPTERA GOVLDI |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 51-64
M. J. Imber,
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摘要:
SummaryThe Grey‐faced Petrel is a non‐migratory winter breeder whose reproductive season occupies 9–10 months. Males spend more time in the burrows than females during the courtship period. Some females keep company with strange males, and may be fertilized by them, but subsequently share incubation with their mate of the previous year. The duration of the pre‐laying absence of females is about two months, and of the pre‐incubation absence of males about seven weeks. Since copulation is presumed to occur before this absence, these petrels seem to have evolved prolonged viability of the spermatozoa, though ovulation may take place some time before laying. Eggs are laid in late June or July but chicks are rarely reared from eggs laid after 14 July; effective laying thus lasts three weeks. The single egg is about 15·5% of the female's weight; she may be able to exert slight control over timing of oviposition. She may be required to incubate, if capable, for up to 14 days from laying but the male takes over, on average, after four days. There are three main incubation spells of 17 days' average duration, two by the male. These are of a duration such that there is usually a change‐over near hatching. Incubation lasts about 55 days. There is competition for burrows, resulting in two‐egg nests. Norway Rats take unattended eggs and young chicks and scavenge, but their predation (less than 10–35% of chicks per year) is not considered to be endangering the population. After initially more frequent feeds, chicks are fed approximately once a week by each parent. They do not become much heavier than adults and the growth rate is slow: about 120 days to departure.The ability to begin breeding in winter, atypical of petrels in this region, may be facilitated by three factors: improved availability of food resulting from longer nocturnal feeding time and reduced inter‐specific competition; the ability to lay fertile eggs two months or more after copulation; and the brevity of the non‐breeding season due to the relative proximity of a su
ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02010.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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5. |
INTRASPECIFIC PREDATION AND COLONIAL BREEDING IN LESSER BLACK‐BACKED GULLSLARUS FUSCUS |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 65-77
J. W. F. Davis,
E. K. Dunn,
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摘要:
SummaryThe breeding biology of Lesser Black‐backed Gulls was studied on Skokholm Island, Pembrokeshire, where the number of breeding pairs has been increasing at about 20% per annum since 1963. Laying was found to be synchronous within small groups. Clutch size and breeding success showed seasonal declines over the spread of breeding. The loss mainly of eggs, but to a lesser extent of chicks also, caused this overall decline in success. Hide observations indicated that the bulk of these losses arose through predation by nesting adult Lesser Black‐backed Gulls on their nearest neighbours. Not infrequently the protagonist had lost its own clutch shortly before turning predator, and such a chain‐sequence should lead to a steady build‐up of aggressive failed breeders and so account for the observed seasonal increase in egg loss. Attentiveness to the clutch decreased with season but this was unlikely to have been important in precipitating the predation. Intermediate plant cover was associated with highest nest density and also with highest chick survival. In addition, nest density was directly correlated with chick survival. Whether plant cover and nest density separately affect chick production remains unresolved. Nevertheless, the increasing nest densities in this colony caused by the growth of the gull population are thought to be responsible for the widespread intraspecific predation, the intensity of which is probably a new feature of the gulls' breeding behaviour. The implications of this ‘internal’ predation for laying synchrony and aggregated nesting are discussed; these two factors of the breeding pattern probably evolved largely to combat ‘external’ predators. Not only are they no protection against inter‐neighbour predation but appear to facilitate it. It remains to be seen whether this kind of predation will significantly affect breeding patterns with further increase
ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02011.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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6. |
THE SOUTHWARD MIGRATION OF PALAEARCTIC BIRDS OVER NGULIA, KENYA |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 78-105
D. J. Pearson,
G. C. Backhurst,
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摘要:
SummarySince 1969 remarkable numbers of night migrants have been attracted during misty conditions in November and December to three 1 kW floodlights at a game viewing lodge on the northeastern side of the Ngulia ridge, a small range of hills in the Tsavo National Park (West), southeast Kenya. The main species involved have been Palaearctic passerines, principally the Marsh WarblerAcrocephalus palustris, the WhitethroatSylvia communisand the SprosserLuscinia luscinia.Data were collected at the Lodge in the late autumns of 1969–71, and in particular between November 1972 and early January 1973, when over 2500 Palaearctic passerines were caught and ringed. Large falls have depended on mist or rain during the latter part of the night, at any time during the month except around full moon. Highest numbers have occurred in late November and the first half of December. In 1973 falls continued into the second week of January. Grounded birds move on quickly, extremely few having been retrapped. During 1972–73, the species prominent in falls at the Lodge were abundant as transit migrants in Tsavo only from mid‐December to early or mid January, at which time retrap rates were highest. The high weights and considerable fat deposits of many birds caught suggested they were grounded some distance north of their destination. Forty‐two migrants analysed had a mean lipid content of 12·9% of their live weight; none was appreciably dehydrated. In 1972–73, highest weights were found at the beginning and end of the season.Individual species are discussed, and in several cases their African status reviewed. Several species were encountered at Ngulia in numbers far larger than those previously reported from elsewhere in Africa. In 1972–73, for instance, over 1000 Marsh Warblers were caught and many thousands of others seen, hundreds of River WarblersLocustella fluviatilisoccurred, and White‐throated RobinsIrania gutturalis, Basra Reed WarblersAcrocephalus griseldis, Rufous Bush ChatsCercotrichas galactotesand Olive‐tree WarblersHippolais olivetorumwere caught regularly.Most of the Basra Reed Warblers, Upcher's WarblersHippolais languidaand Olivaceous WarblersH. pallida, and many of the Whitethroats (apparently all of the eastern raceicterops) handled during late December and early January were in fresh plumage, although these species are not known to moult north of the Sahara. They are presumed to have renewed their plumage in northeast Africa earlier in the autumn. In many Basra Reed Warblers and Whitethroats moult was only partly completed; in almost all such cases it was arrested.Itinerancy south of the Sahara is discussed. It seems clearly established that a regular southward migration, in the usually accepted sense of the word, occurs across Tsavo, of Palaearctic species which have already been in tropical Africa up to three months. Most species involved in this migration cross the equator on a remarkably narrow front, and are rarely recorded in Kenya
ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02012.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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7. |
NESTING ASSOCIATION BETWEEN THE RED‐HEADED WEAVERMALIMBUS RUBRICEPSAND RAPTORIAL BIRDS |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 106-108
J. Frank Walsh,
Brenda Walsh,
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ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02013.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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8. |
WEIGHT AND BODY COMPOSITION IN NESTLING BLUE TITSPARUS CAERULEUS |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 108-112
Raymond J. O'Connor,
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ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02014.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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9. |
DESERTION AND ABNORMAL DEVELOPMENT IN A COLONY OF SOOTY TERNSSTERNA FUSCATAINFESTED BY VIRUS‐INFECTED TICKS |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 112-115
C. J. Feare,
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PDF (421KB)
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ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02015.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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10. |
LACK OF A ‘DESERTION PERIOD’ IN THE NESTLING LIFE OF THE PUFFINFRATERCULA ARCTICA |
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Ibis,
Volume 118,
Issue 1,
1976,
Page 115-118
M. P. Harris,
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PDF (302KB)
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ISSN:0019-1019
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1976.tb02016.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1976
数据来源: WILEY
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