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Patchiness in prey levels increases vulnerability of Critically Endangered Northern Bald Ibises Geronticus eremita on their Syrian breeding grounds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2010

JEREMY A. LINDSELL*
Affiliation:
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, The Lodge, Sandy, Beds SG19 2DL, U.K.
ADWAN H. SHEHAB
Affiliation:
General Commission for Scientific Agricultural Research, Douma, P. O. Box 113, Damascus, Syria.
GUY Q. A. ANDERSON
Affiliation:
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, The Lodge, Sandy, Beds SG19 2DL, U.K.
*
*Author for correspondence; e-mail: jeremy.lindsell@rspb.org.uk
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Summary

A small colony of Northern Bald Ibis Geronticus eremita breeding in the Syrian desert is the only wild remnant of the eastern population of this ‘Critically Endangered’ species. Since its discovery in 2002, the colony has not increased in size despite being protected on the breeding grounds and exhibiting good productivity until recently. Although it appears that the population is being limited during migration and/or wintering, maintaining maximum breeding productivity is a priority for saving this colony to offset poor survival away from Syria. The ibises have a large home range but forage at a relatively small number of sites within it, despite having access to larger areas of apparently suitable habitat. We sampled potential prey using transects, pitfall traps and searches under stones at sites used by the birds to compare with unused sites. Analysis showed that used sites were twice as rich in vertebrate and invertebrate prey than the surrounding areas. Prey levels halved over the course of the breeding season, but we found that they remained higher in the preferred locations compared with the unused areas. Sites closer to the breeding cliff tended to have lower levels of prey available, which perhaps explained the long commutes that the adults undertook when foraging.

This work highlights the vulnerability of the birds at this site. Degradation of the patches they use could reduce food supply below critical levels and alternative sites may be hard for the birds to identify, being relatively scarce. The birds are also vulnerable to shortening of the season in which adequate food is available. There is already little time post-fledging to prepare for migration. Low food availability later in the season makes the birds dependent on key resources found around local reservoirs and these have failed recently. Breeding failures in 2008 and 2009 may have been mitigated by improved feeding conditions on the breeding area. The successful management of the site for ibises should include measures to improve their food security through range management, and possibly reservoir rehabilitation.

Information

Type
Research Articles
Copyright
Copyright © BirdLife International 2011
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of study area showing distribution of sample plots in foraging sites (filled circles) and avoided sites (open circles). Sites A, B and C are arranged from left to right. Grey areas show land outside the normal range of altitude and slope utilised by the birds. The breeding cliff used in the study year was close to the easternmost points. A second site used in some years is close to the central points.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Variation in vertebrate counts with time of day on transects. Data points are predicted values from a GLMM including hour, hour2, temperature, temperature2 and site. The fitted line is a quadratic regression line with 95% confidence intervals.

Figure 2

Table 1. Summary of effort and raw results from three methods of sampling potential prey of Northern Bald Ibis.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Variation in prey counts (vertebrates and invertebrates together) on transects during the season. Data points are predicted values from a GLMM including week (week 15 being 15–21 April), temperature and usage by ibises. The fitted line is linear regression with 95% confidence intervals shown.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Variation in pitfall invertebrate capture rates during the season. Data points are weekly means of predicted values from a GLMM of pitfall counts modeled with site, usage, set-date (week 15 being 15–21 April) and set-date*usage interaction. The fitted lines are quadratic regression lines. X = site A, filled circle = site B, open circle = site C.

Figure 5

Table 2. Correlation between three methods of sampling of Northern Bald Ibis invertebrate prey over the course of the birds' breeding season. Season was divided into 8 equal length time periods and mean transect encounter rate, mean count per trap day and mean count per stone search was calculated for each period.