Abstract

Ntiamoa-Baidu, Y. & Nuoh, A. A. 2000. The role of the Ghana coast in the annual cycle of migratory terns. Ostrich 71 (1 & 2): 183. Data are presented on counts of migratory terns on the Ghana coast over a ten-year period, 1986–1996. Fourteen species of terns were recorded during the period. Influx of terns begins in late August, peaking in September/October, with the highest likelihood of tern occurrence on the Ghana coast recorded in August-November and April-May. Terns fed mostly offshore and used the coastal lagoons as roosting sites, although a few species e.g. Black Tern Chlidonias niger and Little Tern Sterna albifrons, foraged also on the lagoons. Two sites, Songor Lagoon and Densu Delta, regularly held over 50 % of the total count recorded for all sites. A comparison of the day-time counts with dusk roost counts indicate that the day time counts under-represent the total numbers of terns using the Ghana coast. Trends in the populations of the four most abundant tern species: Black Tern, Common Tern Sterna hirundo, Sandwich Tern S. sandvicensis and Royal Tern S. maxima, are analysed; and the implications for conservation of the species are discussed.

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