Population structure of breeding harlequin ducks and the influence of predation risk

Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

Canadian Journal of Zoology, NRC Research Press, Volume 84, Issue 6, p.855–864 (2006)

Call Number:

A06HEA01IDUS

URL:

http://www.sfu.ca/~jpheath/Research/pdf/855-864.pdf

Keywords:

Harlequin Duck, Histrionicus histrionicus, SWAP

Abstract:

Landscape features can have an important influence on the characteristics of populations, often resulting in heterogeneity in demographic processes. Therefore, local measurements of population parameters may not reflect regional characteristics. The authors studied populations of harlequin ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus L., 1758) breeding in 11 river canyons in northern Labrador, Canada, in relation to biophysical habitat characteristics and abundance of avian predators. Density and stability of harlequin duck populations varied among river canyons and were positively related (mean of 4.7 survey years per river). Both density and stability were negatively related to densities of raptorial birds. Raptor density was related to availability of suitable cliff ledges for nesting. Comparison of rivers with stable, high-density harlequin duck populations and those with variable, low-density populations revealed no detectable differences in habitat or prey availability. In a high-density population, observed stability but positive projected growth suggested the system was at carrying capacity and a source of emigrants. In contrast, unstable, low-density populations approached local extinction in some years, while large increases in subsequent years were suggestive of immigration. These findings demonstrate that breeding aggregations in different river canyons could represent an important unit of demographic structure. The abundance of raptors appears to be an important factor influencing local characteristics of harlequin duck populations. The authors discuss the potential influence of local demographic differences on regional population dynamics and their importance for conservation management strategies for migratory species.

Notes:

ELECTRONIC FILE - Zoology: Birds

Citation (CSE style): Heath JP, Robertson GJ, Montevecchi WA. 2006 Jun. Population structure of breeding harlequin ducks and the influence of predation risk. Canadian Journal of Zoology. 84(6):855–864.

SWAP (2/19/2016) citation:
Heath JP, Robertson GJ, Montevecchi WA. 2006. Population structure of breeding harlequin ducks and the influence of predation risk. [accessed 2015 Jun 1]; Canadian Journal of Zoology. 84(6):855–864. http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/abs/10.1139/z06-059#.Vc4Ecfm6dQI