Use of ring recoveries to monitor long-term changes in the survival rates of British and Irish Cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo

Citation
Cv. Wernham et Wj. Peach, Use of ring recoveries to monitor long-term changes in the survival rates of British and Irish Cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo, BIRD STUDY, 46, 1999, pp. 189-197
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
BIRD STUDY
ISSN journal
00063657 → ACNP
Volume
46
Year of publication
1999
Supplement
S
Pages
189 - 197
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3657(1999)46:<189:UORRTM>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Ring recovery data were used to assess changes in the survival rates of Cor morants in Britain and Ireland between 1965 and 1994. It was found that 99% were ringed as nestlings, thus necessitating an assumption of constant rep orting rate across age-classes. The wide geographical spread of ringing eff ort since 1965 produced sufficient recoveries to enable analyses of trends in survival and reporting rates, but regional subdivisions of the data resu lted in high sampling correlations between survival estimates. The assumpti on of a constant reporting rate across age-classes may be violated for Brit ish and Irish Cormorants, because first-year birds are more likely to be sh ot or caught in fishing nets than older birds and they have a differing sea sonal pattern of recoveries. A simple simulation showed that first-year, bu t not adult, survival estimates were particularly sensitive to age-specific variation in reporting rates. However, the observed trend in first-year su rvival appeared robust to the assumption of constant reporting rates across age-classes. Declining reporting rates in Britain and Ireland imply that l arger numbers of Cormorants will need to be ringed in order to monitor futu re changes in survival. Regional colour marking schemes for Cormorants have the potential to provide high quality survival information, to supplement that provided by dean recoveries and to offset the observed decline in repo rting rates.