Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation

The West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck (Clangula hyemalis), which breeds in the Russian Arctic and northern Fennoscandia and winters in the Baltic Sea, has declined rapidly since the 1990s. To identify the causes of the decline and initiate effective conservation measures in...

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Published in:Ornis Fennica
Main Author: Larsson, Kjell
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BirdLife Finland 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681
https://doi.org/10.51812/of.113681
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spelling fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/113681 2023-05-15T15:12:02+02:00 Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation Larsson, Kjell 2022-12-30 application/pdf https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681 https://doi.org/10.51812/of.113681 eng eng BirdLife Finland https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681/75831 https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681/75832 https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681 doi:10.51812/of.113681 Copyright (c) 2022 Kjell Larsson https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 CC-BY Ornis Fennica; Vol 99 Nro 4 (2022): Ornis Fennica Volume 99 Issue 4; 117-131 Ornis Fennica; Vol. 99 No. 4 (2022): Ornis Fennica Volume 99 Issue 4; 117-131 0030-5685 Long-tailed duck Baltic Sea Age ratio Sex ratio population growth distribution info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2022 fttsvojs https://doi.org/10.51812/of.113681 2023-01-04T23:57:57Z The West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck (Clangula hyemalis), which breeds in the Russian Arctic and northern Fennoscandia and winters in the Baltic Sea, has declined rapidly since the 1990s. To identify the causes of the decline and initiate effective conservation measures information on basic demographic parameters is needed. A photo survey method was used to estimate female age ratios and the proportion of males among adults in wintering Long-tailed Ducks at coastal and off-shore areas in the Baltic Sea. Female age ratios were defined as the number of first winter males, assumed equal to the number of first winter females, per adult female. Several thousand individuals were sampled each winter from 2008 to 2021. Female age ratios fluctuated between years and were consistently lower in the southern than in the central Baltic Sea. The proportion of males among wintering adults birds was male-biased, more so in the southern Baltic Sea than in other regions. A population model was used to analyse if low female age ratios between 2008 and 2021 has constrained population growth. Given that the estimated weighted mean female age ratio of 0.153 was representative at the population scale, an extremely high adult female mean annual survival rate of 0.872 would have been needed to maintain a stable population. Considering known sources of anthropogenic mortality in the Baltic Sea, and instead assuming a more realistic survival rate of ca. 0.80, a population decline of ca. 7.7% per year should have occurred during the study period. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Fennoscandia Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online Arctic Ornis Fennica 00 00
institution Open Polar
collection Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
op_collection_id fttsvojs
language English
topic Long-tailed duck
Baltic Sea
Age ratio
Sex ratio
population growth
distribution
spellingShingle Long-tailed duck
Baltic Sea
Age ratio
Sex ratio
population growth
distribution
Larsson, Kjell
Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation
topic_facet Long-tailed duck
Baltic Sea
Age ratio
Sex ratio
population growth
distribution
description The West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck (Clangula hyemalis), which breeds in the Russian Arctic and northern Fennoscandia and winters in the Baltic Sea, has declined rapidly since the 1990s. To identify the causes of the decline and initiate effective conservation measures information on basic demographic parameters is needed. A photo survey method was used to estimate female age ratios and the proportion of males among adults in wintering Long-tailed Ducks at coastal and off-shore areas in the Baltic Sea. Female age ratios were defined as the number of first winter males, assumed equal to the number of first winter females, per adult female. Several thousand individuals were sampled each winter from 2008 to 2021. Female age ratios fluctuated between years and were consistently lower in the southern than in the central Baltic Sea. The proportion of males among wintering adults birds was male-biased, more so in the southern Baltic Sea than in other regions. A population model was used to analyse if low female age ratios between 2008 and 2021 has constrained population growth. Given that the estimated weighted mean female age ratio of 0.153 was representative at the population scale, an extremely high adult female mean annual survival rate of 0.872 would have been needed to maintain a stable population. Considering known sources of anthropogenic mortality in the Baltic Sea, and instead assuming a more realistic survival rate of ca. 0.80, a population decline of ca. 7.7% per year should have occurred during the study period.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Larsson, Kjell
author_facet Larsson, Kjell
author_sort Larsson, Kjell
title Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation
title_short Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation
title_full Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation
title_fullStr Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation
title_full_unstemmed Age and sex ratios in the declining West Siberian/North European population of Long-tailed Duck wintering in the Baltic Sea: Implications for conservation
title_sort age and sex ratios in the declining west siberian/north european population of long-tailed duck wintering in the baltic sea: implications for conservation
publisher BirdLife Finland
publishDate 2022
url https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681
https://doi.org/10.51812/of.113681
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Fennoscandia
genre_facet Arctic
Fennoscandia
op_source Ornis Fennica; Vol 99 Nro 4 (2022): Ornis Fennica Volume 99 Issue 4; 117-131
Ornis Fennica; Vol. 99 No. 4 (2022): Ornis Fennica Volume 99 Issue 4; 117-131
0030-5685
op_relation https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681/75831
https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681/75832
https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/113681
doi:10.51812/of.113681
op_rights Copyright (c) 2022 Kjell Larsson
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.51812/of.113681
container_title Ornis Fennica
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