Abstract
Common pochard Aythya ferina are rapidly declining globally, partly due to water quality change at breeding habitats. Lake restoration at two southern Danish lakes (external nutrient loading reduction, bream Abramis brama and roach Rutilus rutilus removal and stocking of pike Esox lucius) improved water clarity and submerged macrophyte cover. Nesting pochard on one lake increased from 2.3 females per annum pre-treatment to 13.9 afterwards and from 22.7 females to 99.6 post-treatment at a second. Numbers fell from 27.7 to 11.3 at a third untreated lake with consistently high water clarity, but which was colonised and became dominated by holly-leaved naiad Najas marina, which provides no food resources for breeding pochard. Linear modelling (controlling for serial autocorrelation) showed statistically significant effects of annual summer measurements of suspended solids (negative) and Secchi depth (positive) on pochard abundance at both restored lakes and chlorophyll (negative) at one of those lakes, but no effects at the third. Breeding pochard numbers also correlated positively with submerged macrophyte cover at one restored lake with adequate data. Results support the hypothesis that lake restoration to improve water quality enhances conditions for locally breeding pochard, as long as restored conditions secure appropriate submerged macrophyte communities for nesting pochard.
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