Analysis of the consequences of climate change and habitat modification on migratory birds.

Habitat alteration and climate change are among the anthropogenic factors that contribute most to the current global decline of biodiversity. Due to their sensitivity to environmental conditions, birds are considered excellent indicators of global change. In particular, long-distance migrants are li...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: SICURELLA, BEATRICE CARLOTTA
Other Authors: Sicurella, B, AMBROSINI, ROBERTO
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: UniversitĂ  degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10281/69740
Description
Summary:Habitat alteration and climate change are among the anthropogenic factors that contribute most to the current global decline of biodiversity. Due to their sensitivity to environmental conditions, birds are considered excellent indicators of global change. In particular, long-distance migrants are likely more sensitive to global change than residents or short-distance migrants because they suffer from changes in ecological conditions both at their breeding and wintering quarters The aim of this thesis is to investigate the effects of climate change and habitat modification on population dynamics of migratory birds. The first part of this thesis includes papers investigating the effects of environmental conditions experienced by two long-distance migratory species, the Barn Swallow Hirundo rustica and the Common Swift Apus apus, at their breeding quarters in Northern Italy on their population dynamics. We observed that both the presence of livestock farming and the extent of hayfields close to the breeding site affected colony size of Barn Swallows and that recent variation in these conditions has probably concurred to worsen the demographic decline that this population has suffered. We also investigated the effect of the rearing environment on the survival and growth of Common Swift nestlings in a part of the breeding range of this species where these effects have never been investigated so far. We observed that nestlings’ growth is influenced not only by competition for resources with nest mates, but also by meteorological conditions. However, the effects we documented were different from those observed in more northern parts of the breeding range of the species, thus suggesting geographical variation in the susceptibility of this widespread species to general ecological conditions. In the second part of this thesis we aimed at identifying migration routes and wintering quarters of small-sized migrant birds, and at evaluating the effect of environmental conditions experienced during migration and wintering on ...