The role of cultivated versus wild seeds in the diet of European turtle doves (Streptopelia turtur) across European breeding and African wintering grounds

Author:

Young Rebecca E.1ORCID,Dunn Jenny C.2,Vaughan Ian P.1,Mallord John W.3,Drake Lorna E.1,Orsman Chris J.3,Ka Moussa4,Diallo Mamadou B.4,Sarr Malang4,Lormée Hervé5,Eraud Cyril5,Kiss Orsolya6,Marchbank Angela1,Symondson William O. C.1

Affiliation:

1. Cardiff School of Biosciences Cardiff Univeristy Cardiff UK

2. School of Life Sciences, Joseph Banks Laboratories University of Lincoln Lincoln UK

3. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science, the Lodge Sandy, Bedfordshire UK

4. Nature Communauté Développement Dakar Senegal

5. Office National de la Chasse et de la Faune Sauvage Unité Avifaune Migratrice, Réserve de Chizé Villiers‐en‐Bois France

6. Faculty of Agriculture, Institute of Animal Sciences and Wildlife Management, University of Szeged Hódmezővásárhely Hungary

Abstract

AbstractAgricultural intensification is a major driver in species declines, with changes in land use resulting in widespread alteration of resource availability. An increase in anthropogenic food resources, alongside decreasing natural resources, has resulted in species undergoing dietary changes that can have important ecological consequences, particularly for declining species. Here we use high‐throughput sequencing to analyze the diet of the migrant European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur), a species that has experienced significant population decline throughout its European range. We analyze the diet of this species on both breeding and wintering grounds to gain an understanding of resource use throughout the annual cycle and compare areas of more and less intensive agriculture in western and eastern Europe, respectively. We examine associations with body condition, spatiotemporal variation and the source of food (wild or cultivated). We identified 121 taxonomic units in the diet, with significant variation across sampling seasons, and very little overlap between the breeding and wintering seasons, as well as high levels of cultivated food resources in the diet of turtle doves in both breeding and wintering grounds, with the highest proportion of wild seeds in the diet occurring in birds caught in Hungary, where agricultural intensity was lowest. We detected no association between body condition and the consumption of cultivated food resources. We demonstrate the importance of wild resources in birds on the wintering grounds as they approach migration, where body condition increased as the season progressed, concurrent with an increased consumption of wild seeds. These findings indicate the importance of habitats rich in wild seeds and the need to consider food availability on the wintering grounds, as well as the breeding grounds in turtle dove conservation strategies.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference89 articles.

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2. Beer Sheba Project. (2002).The Beer Sheba Project.http://www.beershebaproject.org

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