Abstract

Abstract. The breeding biology and population dynamics of the Pied Flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca in pine, mixed and deciduous forests in Skibotn, Northern Norway (69°20’N, 20°20’E), was studied during 33 years (1987–2019; in total 1775 completed first clutches). It was a period during which summer temperatures remained relatively stable, but late spring (May) temperatures tended to become warmer. The number of breeding pairs declined over the study period but varied less than in populations living in more harsh subalpine environments. In spite of the northern location, females started to lay eggs in a relatively late phenological phase of the environment and in relatively warm weather. The date of birch leafing and the date of egg-laying advanced during the study period, and they correlated with each other. Mean clutch size was 6.4 eggs, and mean number of fledglings/nest 4.6. Date of egg-laying was earlier and clutch size larger in deciduous forests than in pine and mixed forests, but this did not translate into better fledgling productivity. The main causes of nesting failure were predation by small mustelids and starvation in warm and dry summers. However, in the long run the population seemed to be able to maintain itself without immigration, i.e., act as a source population. The possibility that during warm climate periods of the past, breeding biology and population dynamics of Pied Flycatchers over large geographical areas might have resembled those in Skibotn is discussed.
 
 Cover photo: “Mummified” Pied Flycatcher nestling (age about 10 days) starved to death in Skibotn in the warm and dry summer of 1988. Photo: Antero Järvinen.

Highlights

  • The present long-term population study of the Pied Flycatcher in Skibotn, Northern Norway, was initially intended to last for only three years

  • I had previously (Järvinen 1983, 1989) studied Pied Flycatchers in a subalpine mountain birch forest in nearby Kilpisjärvi (Northern Finland, 69°03’N, 20°50’E, 475-600 m a.s.l.) and wanted to know whether there were any differences in the breeding biology of the species between these adjacent but environmentally very different habitats (Järvinen 1993a)

  • The purpose of the present study is to present facts about a Pied Flycatcher population at the northern limit of the species’ breeding range using a long time-series (33 years)

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Summary

Introduction

The present long-term population study of the Pied Flycatcher in Skibotn, Northern Norway, was initially intended to last for only three years. The first results from this Pied Flycatcher population breeding in relict pine forests (for Holocene climate history of the area, see Lilleøren et al 2012) and other forests in Skibotn Valley were so interesting (Järvinen 1993a) that I decided to continue the work for a much longer period. The results of the first three years (1987–89) suggested that compared to other northern areas Skibotn is a flycatchers “paradise”. It was expected that a considerably extended time-series would confirm some of the earlier results as well as giving new insights into the factors that affect long-term population dynamics. My results may be helpful when we try to understand how and why northern nature varies and changes over time

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