Abstract

Fish ponds host a relatively important share of the breeding population of waterfowl in Europe. The objective of this study was to investigate the influence of fish-farming management on the distribution of dabbling and diving duck breeding, in 103 fishponds from four regions important for duck breeding in France. Duck breeding in fish ponds was apparently influenced by food resource and nesting site availability. Dabbling duck pair density was generally higher when invertebrates were abundant in macrophytes beds and when competition for food with carps Cyprinus carpio was potentially decreased by lower fish stock biomass. Diving duck pair abundance seemed to be negatively influenced by low invertebrates biomasses in pond sediment and by the absence of large reed beds at the edge of waterbodies. The difference between dabbling and diving ducks was also confirmed by a study of the variation in brood numbers standardized by pair numbers. This brood:pair ratio corresponded to a measure of nesting success and the possible attraction of fish ponds for some broods hatched in neighbouring waterbodies. Dabbling duck brood:pair ratio was lower in one of the study regions where most of meadow areas surrounding fish ponds have been transformed into cereal crops in the past few decades. Diving duck brood:pair ratio was positively linked to pond fertilization due to fish farming. Fish farming, therefore, influenced duck breeding by an interaction between carp density and fertilization. We hypothesize that fertilization increases zooplankton density, thereby decreasing the competition between carps and waterfowl for benthic prey.

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