Abstract

Abstract In the end of the 1990's the area of abandoned arable land in Poland amounted to ca. 2,000,000 ha, which constituted nearly 11% of the total farmland. A total of 21 bird species (average 5.0, range 1–12) was found to breed in abandoned farmland of Wroclaw Plain (SW Poland, Lower Silesia Province). Between 1 and 94 pairs bred per field in 66 out of 67 study fields (average surface 5.0 ± 10.5 ha). Six species ( Acrocephalus palustris , Saxicola rubetra , Sylvia communis , Miliaria calandra , Locustella naevia , Emberiza schoeniclus ) represented some 83% the whole community. The number of pairs was positively correlated with the field size. The occurrence of a rich and diverse breeding bird fauna on older abandoned fields was conditioned by the presence of a well-preserved vegetation cover ( Tanacetum vulgare , Solidago sp., Artemisia vulgaris ) of the previous year.

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