Prey selection and food habits of breeding Burrowing Owls (Athene cunicularia) in natural and modified habitats of Argentine pampas

Author(s):  
Matilde Cavalli ◽  
Alejandro V. Baladr�n ◽  
Juan P. Isacch ◽  
Guadalupe Mart�nez ◽  
Mar�a S. B�
2013 ◽  
Vol 78 (4) ◽  
pp. 296-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Muthamizh Selvan ◽  
Gopi Govindhan Veeraswami ◽  
Salvador Lyngdoh ◽  
Bilal Habib ◽  
Syed Ainul Hussain

The Auk ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 122 (2) ◽  
pp. 464-478 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole M. Korfanta ◽  
David B. McDonald ◽  
Travis C. Glenn

Abstract We assessed the effects of range disjunction, migratory habit, coloniality, and habitat structure on the genetic differentiation of North American Burrowing Owl (Athene cunicularia) populations. Burrowing Owls in North America comprise two forms or subspecies: A. c. floridana in Florida, separated by ∼1,500 km from the western form, A. c. hypugaea, which ranges from Texas to California and north to southern Canada. Burrowing Owls tend to be loosely colonial, and both the Florida populations and southerly populations of A. c. hypugaea from California to Texas are nonmigratory. To assess genetic structure, we examined 201 individuals from nine western and six Florida populations at seven highly variable microsatellite DNA loci. Mean gene diversity (Hexp) was higher in the west than in Florida (0.539 and 0.341, respectively; P < 0.05). Populations within subspecies were essentially panmictic (A. c. floridana: θ = 0.038, ρ = 0.014; A. c. hypugaea: θ = 0.014, ρ = 0.009) and even genetic differentiation across subspecies was modest (θ = 0.051, ρ = 0.014). Nevertheless, the western and Florida forms were easily distinguished by any of several criteria, such as allelic absences in Florida, assignment tests, and well-supported branches on the inferred phylogenetic tree. Genetic differentiation was at least twice as great in resident Florida (θ = 0.038) and California (θ = 0.021) populations as in migratory western populations (θ = 0.012), though 95% confidence intervals of theta estimates overlapped. We found no evidence of a genetic bottleneck that would result in evolutionary disequilibrium within subspecies. In the west, high observed heterozygosity values and evidence of gene flow suggest that population declines and patchy habitat, which currently imperil this species throughout much of its range, have not led to inbreeding or biologically meaningful genetic differentiation among the sampled populations.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (7) ◽  
pp. 1306-1313 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. Reid ◽  
T. E. Code ◽  
A. C. H. Reid ◽  
S. M. Herrero

Food habits of river otter (Lontra canadensis) were quantified by analysis of 1191 scats systematically collected in the Winefred Lake area (Athabasca River drainage) of northeastern Alberta to assess seasonal prey selection, the utility of scats for fish inventory, and the prominence of beavers as otter food. Fish dominated the annual diet, being found in 91.9% of scats. Insects, molluscs, crustaceans, and waterfowl were also substantial prey. Less agile, abundant shallow-water fish, such as a catostomid and various cyprinids, were the most common prey. Coregonine fish dominated the diet during their autumn spawning, were rarely eaten in summer when in the hypolimnion, but appeared to be preferred prey. In winter, with virtually no open water, the diet was less diverse and was dominated by cyprinid and gasterosteid fish. Such a fish fauna exists in small lakes, bog ponds, and beaver impoundments. We hypothesize that in winter, otters select water bodies, and consequently available prey, on the basis of shoreline substrate and morphology and relative ease of passage from air to water. Otter scats contained 14 of 18 fish species known to be in the study area. However, the contents of scats overestimated the diversity offish species inhabiting individual lakes. Beavers were occasionally eaten by otters, but were a minor component of the diet.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. e0170549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madhu Chetri ◽  
Morten Odden ◽  
Per Wegge

The Auk ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 136 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kara A Navock ◽  
David H Johnson ◽  
Samantha Evans ◽  
Matthew J Kohn ◽  
James R Belthoff

ABSTRACT Host-parasite relationships between Western Burrowing Owls (Athene cunicularia hypugaea) and the fleas (Pulex irritans, Siphonaptera:Pulicidae) they harbor were studied to understand the extent to which migratory Burrowing Owls translocated fleas from wintering grounds to breeding grounds. This has implications for host-parasite relationships in Burrowing Owls and also potentially for the dynamics of plague, as Burrowing Owl distributions overlap plague foci, owls inhabit fossorial mammal colonies where epizootic outbreaks of plague occur, and owls may harbor species of flea that are competent plague vectors. We used hydrogen stable isotope analysis to help elucidate geographic origins of fleas collected from adults and nestlings in 2 migratory populations of Burrowing Owls in Idaho and Oregon, USA. For adults, we posited that bird-mediated dispersal would impart flea isotopic compositions representative of southern latitudes and be similar to owl toenail tissue recently grown on wintering grounds, but they would differ from contour feathers presumably grown on breeding grounds the previous year. We assumed nestling feathers and toenails would have isotopic compositions representative of the breeding grounds. We analyzed contour feathers and toenails from adults collected shortly after they arrived in breeding grounds following spring migration and from nestlings later in the breeding season, to which we compared isotopic compositions in fleas collected from individuals of both age classes. Fleas on nestlings in both populations had isotopic compositions that did not differ from nestling feathers and toenails, suggesting that nestling fleas had breeding ground origins. Fleas on adults in one population (Oregon) had breeding ground isotopic signatures, as flea compositions did not differ from nestling feathers or toenails. Adult owls in Idaho had fleas that similarly did not express a wintering ground signature, but they were enriched in the heavy isotope (deuterium) relative to nestling feathers and toenails. Therefore, we discuss the possibility that adult owls in Idaho acquired fleas at migratory stopover sites. While the latter indicates that Burrowing Owls have the potential to disperse fleas, there was no evidence of continent-wide movement of fleas by owls from wintering grounds to breeding grounds.


2019 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
Gabriel Ruiz Ayma ◽  
Alina Olalla Kerstupp ◽  
Antonio Guzmán Velasco ◽  
José I. González Rojas

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document