Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations

Recently ecologists have recognized the importance of environmental variability on population growth rate and individual fitness. Vole population dynamics is typical pulse resource with long intervals of low abundance and short intervals of superabundance. There is sufficient evidence that the produ...

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Main Authors: Pavluvčík, P., Poprach, K., Machar, I., Losík, J., Gouveia, A., Tkadlec, E. (Emil)
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0255035
id ftczacademyscien:oai:asep.lib.cas.cz:CavUnEpca/0454332
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spelling ftczacademyscien:oai:asep.lib.cas.cz:CavUnEpca/0454332 2024-09-15T18:02:47+00:00 Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations Pavluvčík, P. Poprach, K. Machar, I. Losík, J. Gouveia, A. Tkadlec, E. (Emil) 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0255035 eng eng urn:isbn: 978-80-87189-18-4 http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0255035 barn owl common vole info:eu-repo/semantics/other info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2015 ftczacademyscien 2024-08-19T05:33:00Z Recently ecologists have recognized the importance of environmental variability on population growth rate and individual fitness. Vole population dynamics is typical pulse resource with long intervals of low abundance and short intervals of superabundance. There is sufficient evidence that the productivity of vole-eating predators follows closely changes in vole\ndensities. However, we are less informed about the responses of predators to changing variability of food resource availability. We studied the system barn owl–common vole to examine the variation in barn owl (Tyto alba) annual productivity dependent on common vole (Microtus arvalis) fluctuating numbers. Between 1998 and 2013, 681 active nesting sites situated in 17 Czech districts were examined every year. In each examined district, vole abundances were measured using a burrow index, the number of active burrow entrances per hectare. The description of the functional relationship at the level of the Czech Republic\nrevealed that owl abundance covaried more with autumn than spring vole abundances. The relationship was linear. By focusing on the variation in annual productivity at the district level relative to the vole population variability, we found that the responses in annual productivity were indeed stronger in districts with higher population variability of voles. Other/Unknown Material Common vole Microtus arvalis The Czech Academy of Sciences: Publication Activity (ASEP)
institution Open Polar
collection The Czech Academy of Sciences: Publication Activity (ASEP)
op_collection_id ftczacademyscien
language English
topic barn owl
common vole
spellingShingle barn owl
common vole
Pavluvčík, P.
Poprach, K.
Machar, I.
Losík, J.
Gouveia, A.
Tkadlec, E. (Emil)
Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
topic_facet barn owl
common vole
description Recently ecologists have recognized the importance of environmental variability on population growth rate and individual fitness. Vole population dynamics is typical pulse resource with long intervals of low abundance and short intervals of superabundance. There is sufficient evidence that the productivity of vole-eating predators follows closely changes in vole\ndensities. However, we are less informed about the responses of predators to changing variability of food resource availability. We studied the system barn owl–common vole to examine the variation in barn owl (Tyto alba) annual productivity dependent on common vole (Microtus arvalis) fluctuating numbers. Between 1998 and 2013, 681 active nesting sites situated in 17 Czech districts were examined every year. In each examined district, vole abundances were measured using a burrow index, the number of active burrow entrances per hectare. The description of the functional relationship at the level of the Czech Republic\nrevealed that owl abundance covaried more with autumn than spring vole abundances. The relationship was linear. By focusing on the variation in annual productivity at the district level relative to the vole population variability, we found that the responses in annual productivity were indeed stronger in districts with higher population variability of voles.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Pavluvčík, P.
Poprach, K.
Machar, I.
Losík, J.
Gouveia, A.
Tkadlec, E. (Emil)
author_facet Pavluvčík, P.
Poprach, K.
Machar, I.
Losík, J.
Gouveia, A.
Tkadlec, E. (Emil)
author_sort Pavluvčík, P.
title Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
title_short Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
title_full Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
title_fullStr Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
title_full_unstemmed Barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
title_sort barn owl productivity responses to fluctuating vole populations
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0255035
genre Common vole
Microtus arvalis
genre_facet Common vole
Microtus arvalis
op_relation urn:isbn: 978-80-87189-18-4
http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0255035
_version_ 1810440197973737472