ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION, FOOD LIMITATION AND REPRODUCTIVE OUTPUT - JUVENILE SURVIVAL IN LESSER SNOW GEESE

Citation
Td. Williams et al., ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION, FOOD LIMITATION AND REPRODUCTIVE OUTPUT - JUVENILE SURVIVAL IN LESSER SNOW GEESE, Journal of Animal Ecology, 62(4), 1993, pp. 766-777
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218790
Volume
62
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
766 - 777
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8790(1993)62:4<766:EDFLAR>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
1. Long-term changes in pre-fledging gosling survival, in relation to food availability, were investigated in a population of lesser snow ge ese (Anser caerulescens caerulescens) at La Perouse Bay, Manitoba. Bot h colony size and the density of birds using brood-rearing areas incre ased over the duration of the study (the former from 2000 to 8-9000 pa irs). 2. Annual mean size of broods using traditional brood-rearing ar eas (as a proportion of initial brood size) declined significantly bet ween 1979 and 1991, from 0.9-1.0 to 0.6-0.8. 3. Mean proportion of mar ked goslings in a brood that survived from hatch to ringing (5-6 weeks of age) declined from approximately 65% prior to 1980 to 35-40% in re cent years. Annual mean daily survival rate of goslings declined from 70-100% to 40-55% over the same period. 4. Within-seasons there was a small but significant decline in gosling survival rate over time for w eeks 1-4 post-hatch, while the decline in week 5 was highly significan t and 12-14 times greater than for weeks 1-4 combined. 5. Mean size of broods on the feeding area early in the season which were subsequentl y resighted or not resighted did not differ significantly between 1979 -86, but broods not resighted were on average 0.33 goslings (13%) larg er than resighted broods between 1989 and 1991. 6. Over the same perio d (1979-91) mean above-ground biomass of graminoid salt-marsh sward de clined significantly from approximately 50 g m-2 to 25 g m-2 . This ra te of decline was greatest during late brood-rearing (>21 days post-ha tch). 7. Annual and seasonal variation in gosling survival is consiste nt with a density-dependent effect of habitat degradation and food lim itation. Birds are responding to this in two-ways: (i) those remaining on the traditional areas are suffering decreased reproductive output (feeding site fidelity may now be maladaptive); and (ii) those dispers ing to alternate Tearing areas show higher rates of growth and surviva l.