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BREEDING NUMBERS AND REPRODUCTIVE RATE OF EIDERS AT THE SANDS OF FORVIE NATIONAL NATURE RESERVE, SCOTLAND
Author(s) -
Milne H.
Publication year - 1974
Publication title -
ibis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.933
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1474-919X
pISSN - 0019-1019
DOI - 10.1111/j.1474-919x.1974.tb00233.x
Subject(s) - hatchling , hatching , fledge , avian clutch size , biology , seasonal breeder , population , predation , zoology , reproduction , ecology , demography , sociology
Summary The total population of Eiders at the Sands of Forvie National Nature Reserve, Aberdeenshire, increased from about 3000 birds during 1961–63 to about 4800 birds in 1964–70. At the same time the estimated number of breeding pairs increased from about 1200 in 1961–63, to about 1800 in 1965–68 and to 2000 in 1970. The mean size of completed clutches was 4.4; the number of eggs in a clutch showed a significant decline during the season from an average of 4.7 to 3.4 in most years. The overall hatching success was 63%, but there was a decline with season as a result of increased losses to predators. In 1964 and 1969 laying was retarded, mean clutch‐size reduced, and the number of birds attempting to lay dropped by half, due to inclement weather just at the onset of laying. In 1969 the eggs produced were smaller than in other years, and hatching success was lower. The female incubates without feeding, and is required to store sufficient energy, in the form of fat, to last her through the 26 days in addition to producing her clutch of eggs. An hypothesis is advanced which relates the feeding efficiency of the paired female immediately prior to laying to her egg production and incubating pattern, and which offers an explanation of the decline in clutch‐size and hatching success evident during the season. In most years less than 5% of hatchlings survived to fledge; high survival was recorded in 1963, 1968 and 1970. Following the high production in 1963 the population increased in 1964 and the breeding stock in 1965 (females start to breed at two years old). The corresponding changes, following good breeding in 1968, were not so clearly detected because of unusually high adult mortality from oil pollution at the winter grounds in 1968 and the ‘late’ breeding year in 1969. The breeding stock in 1970, however, was higher than in any other year. This population continues to grow apparently as a result of its own reproductive output checked only by low productivity in most years and occasional high adult mortality.

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