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Rooks show a growing tendency to winter in cities. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of meteorological factors on the selection of feeding habitats and to discuss the diversity of feeding strategies in urban environments of different sizes and housing densities. The study was carried out in two cities in south-western Poland, Wrocław and Brzeg (populations of 636,000 and 39,000, respectively), in the years 2004–2008. Nineteen research areas differing in housing density were controlled once a week. In multiple regression, the number of rooks feeding in urban environments showed a correlation with air temperature and the thickness of snow cover. The densities of feeding rooks were higher in urban environments than in agrocenoses. They were also higher in Wrocław than in Brzeg, and in built-up areas than in undeveloped ones. Feeding groups were smaller in Brzeg than in Wrocław. They were also smaller in built-up areas in Brzeg than in undeveloped ones. More rooks fed individually in Brzeg than in Wrocław. The diversity in the frequency of individually feeding rooks in built-up and undeveloped environments was specific to each city. Rooks feeding in Brzeg were more active in searching for food than those in Wrocław, and birds feeding on optimum, undeveloped feeding grounds were more active than those in built-up areas . In both cities, rooks were fed by humans, mainly in built-up areas.
This work summarizes results concerning the nest development of synanthropic birds (Tree Sparrows, House Sparrows, Great Tits, Jackdaws, House Martins) in urban environments, published to date from the research done by the author and sets them against the background of data in the field under discussion. Concentration changes in Ca, Mg, Fe, Zn, Cu, Mn, Co, Cd and Pb were different with age, depending on the health status of nestlings (healthy, sick and dead) and the species. The intensity and directions of changes in the concentrations of elements in the bodies of developing nestlings were found to be dependent on the degree of chemical contamination in the environment. During development in the nest, there was a slower rise in the concentrations of physiological elements (Ca, Mg, Fe, Zn) in the organs (liver, kidneys, lung, heart, spleen, pectoral muscles, brain, feathers, and bones: femur, patella, fibula, tibiotarsus, larsometatarsus)', of nestlings from polluted environments than in those from unpolluted ones. In turn, the concentrations of non-physiological elements (Pb, Cd) showed a greater rate of increase in nestlings from polluted areas, which were also characterized by a slower increase in biomass, with maximum mass being attained just before flight from the nest. Increased Pb and Cd concentrations were associated with impaired growth of nestlings, i.e. decreased asymptote of body masses growth. Unpolluted urban areas are characterized by greater hatching and fledging successes than the polluted ones. Chlorinated hydrocarbons can affect embryonic mortality amj may be an indirect cause of nestling death. Higher concentrations of toxic heavy metals limit the laying-down of physiological elements in nestlings, which accumulate small amounts of Pb and Cd in soft tissues and greater amounts in bones and feathers. Clutch sizes are influenced not only by concentrations (in the bodies of females) of elements important for eggs production, but also by the concentrations of toxic heavy metals in females and eggs - a factor in turn dependent on the concentrations of these metals in the environment (thereby attesting to its degree of pollution). Sparrow nestlings whose lipid content was lower than that necessary to survive the night, had lower Fe concentration in the liver compared with those with higher lipid reserves. Pb and Cd have an unfavourable impact on the lipid and protein reserves of nestlings. Urban birds can exist in their polluted environments due to a variety of adaptations.
Changes in the numbers of corvids wintering in Warsaw (Central Poland), in the last sixteen years were analyzed. Four species were studied: Rook Corvus frugilegus L., Jackdaw C. monedula L., Hooded Crow C. corone cornix L. and Magpie Pica pica (L.) The results were based on density data for birds foraging in three urban parks. The bird counts were conducted in November and December 1988–2003. It was found that the number of wintering Rooks decreased significantly (0.5 fold), populations of Jackdaws and Hooded Crows – increased (4.25 and 3.95 fold, respectively), and no apparent trends were observed for Magpies during this period. Observed trends for Rooks as well as comparisons of limited data gathered earlier in other areas may confirm suggestions about the changing of migration routes of this species.
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