Abstract

Predators can modify their diet and demography in response to changes in food availability and habitat quality. I tested the prediction that some species can change their predation pattern, between specialist type and generalist type, depending on the complexity of habitat structure. It was hypothesized that their dietary response is stronger in diversified habitats than in simplified ones, but the opposite tendency occurs in the case of reproductive response. The nestling diet and breeding success of the Eurasian Buzzard Buteo buteo, the abundance of its main prey (the common vole Microtus arvalis), and that of the most important alternative prey group (passerines) were estimated over ten years in two types of agricultural habitat in western Poland, i.e., in the diversified habitat of small fields and the simplified habitat of large fields. The vole abundance was higher in large fields, but the abundance of passerines was greater in small fields. The frequency of voles in the Eurasian Buzzard nestling diet was higher in large fields than in small fields and increased with the abundance of this prey in crop fields. However, no difference in the relationship between the vole frequency in the diet of Eurasian Buzzards and the abundance of voles was found between the two habitat types. The breeding success of Eurasian Buzzards was dependent on the vole abundance, but this relationship did not differ between the two field types. It seems that the pattern of dietary and reproductive response of Eurasian Buzzards depends on the actual availability of individual prey species, which can be modified by habitat quality, rather than on relative prey abundance.

Highlights

  • Birds of prey can change their diet and demography as a result of fluctuations in the abundance of prey species [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • The vole abundance was higher in large fields, but the abundance of passerines was greater in small fields

  • It seems that the pattern of dietary and reproductive response of Eurasian Buzzards depends on the actual availability of individual prey species, which can be modified by habitat quality, rather than on relative prey abundance

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Summary

Introduction

Birds of prey can change their diet and demography as a result of fluctuations in the abundance of prey species [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The reproductive performance and numbers of specialist predators clearly change in response to fluctuations in their main prey abundance, while such a marked numerical response is typically not observed in generalists [7,8,9]. Responses consistent with these rules have been found, for example, in the species listed above, i.e., Gyrfalcons showed a delayed numerical response to changes in the density of Rock Ptarmigans Lagopus muta in north-east Iceland [3], but the breeding numbers of Peregrine Falcons did not significantly change with the abundance of Red

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