Vegetation height and structure drive foraging habitat selection of the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) in intensive agricultural landscapes

Author:

Cioccarelli Sara12,Terras Anna3,Assandri Giacomo4,Berlusconi Alessandro56,Grattini Nunzio7,Mercogliano Alessandro1,Pazhera Aliona1,Sbrilli Andrea6,Cecere Jacopo G.4,Rubolini Diego16,Morganti Michelangelo6

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Scienze e Politiche Ambientali, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

2. Ethology Unit, Department of Biology, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy

3. Laboratoire Ecologie et Biologie des Interactions, Université de Poitiers, Poitiers Cedex 9, France

4. Area Avifauna Migratrice, Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale (ISPRA), Ozzano Emilia (BO), Italy

5. Environment Analysis and Management Unit—Guido Tosi Research Group— Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese (VA), Italy

6. Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche—Istituto di Ricerca sulle Acque (CNR-IRSA), Brugherio (MB) and Montelibretti (RM), Italy

7. SOM Stazione Ornitologica Modenese “Il Pettazzurro”, Mirandola (MO), Italy

Abstract

Habitat selection in animals is a fundamental ecological process with key conservation implications. Assessing habitat selection in endangered species and populations occupying the extreme edges of their distribution range, or living in highly anthropized landscapes, may be of particular interest as it may provide hints to mechanisms promoting potential range expansions. We assessed second- and third-order foraging habitat selection in the northernmost European breeding population of the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni), a migratory falcon of European conservation interest, by integrating results obtained from 411 direct observations with those gathered from nine GPS-tracked individuals. The study population breeds in the intensively cultivated Po Plain (northern Italy). Direct observations and GPS data coincide in showing that foraging lesser kestrels shifted their habitat preferences through the breeding cycle. They positively selected alfalfa and other non-irrigated crops during the early breeding season, while winter cereals were selected during the nestling-rearing phase. Maize was selected during the early breeding season, after sowing, but significantly avoided later. Overall, vegetation height emerged as the main predictor of foraging habitat selection, with birds preferring short vegetation, which is likely to maximise prey accessibility. Such a flexibility in foraging habitat selection according to spatio-temporal variation in the agricultural landscape determined by local crop management practices may have allowed the species to successfully thrive in one of the most intensively cultivated areas of Europe. In the southeastern Po Plain, the broad extent of hay and non-irrigated crops is possibly functioning as a surrogate habitat for the pseudo-steppe environment where most of the European breeding population is settled, fostering the northward expansion of the species in Europe. In intensive agricultural landscapes, the maintenance of alfalfa and winter cereals crops and an overall high crop heterogeneity (deriving from crop rotation) is fundamental to accommodate the ecological requirements of the species in different phases of its breeding cycle.

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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