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923 Great Tits were weighed and measured in Central Poland in the years 1992-1996, while recaptures took the total number of checks to 1828. Assessments of fatness in the birds followed accepted procedures in being confined to quantities of furcular and abdominal fat. The Great Tits were found to lay down reserves of fat in a different way to those described previously for Passeriformes. Moreover, the scales known to date were insufficiently precise to allow for the study of the biology of wintering birds. A proposed new scale of fatness extends by 4 points the 9-point scale used over many years to study birds migrating along the Baltic shore (in the Operation Baltic) and thus accounts for the way in which Great Tits lay down fat. The relationship between body mass and the points on the proposed scale is of a linear nature for low and moderate fatness. The data obtained make it clear that a general, more detailed than 9-point, scale of fatness cannot be produced for all the species of Passeriformes.
Acta Ornithologica
|
1995
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tom 30
|
nr 2
145-151
Three days of heavy rain (15.7, 37.9, 30.7 mm) and low temperature (min. temp. 5.7°C) during the breeding season 1991 caused high brood mortality in the Great Tit (GT) and the Blue Tit (ВТ), depending on brood advancement — in both species broods which died were older. In GT the mean advancement of dying broods was 5.29 days since hatching, while that of surviving ones 0.54 (P = 0.0005). In ВТ the advancement of broods which died was 7.82 and that of broods which survived —1.71 (P = 0.0004). The mortality was higher in ВТ than in GT, the former started breeding 4 days earlier on average (mean time of 1st egg laying in ВТ was 8.09 days, for GT was 11.96 days (P<0.0006). The calculated standardized selection differentials show very strong selection on the timing of breeding both in GT (iGT = 0.366, P = 0.042) and ВТ (iBT = 1.059, P = 0.0003). The higher absolute energy demands of older broods in view of limited food resources and vulnerability of young to hypothermia seem to be proximate cause of the mortality in both species. The selection resulted in almost the unification of the time of breeding in both species. The strength of this selection implies that weather could be one of the most important factors determining the timing of breeding.
6
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Pasożytnicze nicienie sikor (Paridae) w Polsce

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Among 218 birds, belonging to 6 species of Paridae only in Parus major three species of Nematoda were detected: Capillaria tridens, Cardiofilaria pavlovskyi and Diplotriaena henryi. A detailed description of the morphology is given for Capilaria tridens. It is a new one for Parus major as well as for the Paridae in the Pa1earctic region.
The wintering mixed flocks of tits (Paridae) and associated birds, are good objects for studying ecological niche division. In this respect the mixed species flocks on the Asian continent are poorly studied in comparison to European and North American ones. In this report we describe spatial distribution of foraging sites of eight bird species in 39 winter flocks near Seoul, Korea: Varied tit – Parus varius Temminck & Schlegel, Great tit – P. major Temminck & Schlegel, Marsh tit – P. palustris Bianchi, Coal tit – P. ater Buturlin, Long-tailed tit – Aegithalos caudatus Clark, Nuthatch – Sitta europaea Swinhoe, Japanese Pygmy Woodpecker – Dendrocopos kizuki Taka-Tsukasa, and Goldcrest – Regulus regulus Blakiston. Foraging sites (in coniferous and mixed forests) were classified into five height layers: on the ground, <1.5 m above the ground, 1.5–4 m, 4–7m, and > 7m. Trees were divided into three horizontal zones depending on the distance from trunk: crown interior, intermediate zone, and external twigs. Species differed significantly in the use of height layers: P. major foraged mostly on the ground, P. ater and A. caudatus foraged mostly in the highest forest layer, P. palustris was often seen in bushes, and P. varius occurred in the middle tree layer. There was no clear correlation between height of foraging and species body size. However, body size played an important role for segregation in horizontal zones, and two species, the larger P.major and the smaller P. ater differed significantly in the mean distance from trunk. Species of large body size like P. varius and P. major, foraged mostly in the interior of the tree crown, while the smaller species, P.ater and A. caudatus, foraged mostly in the external zone; the intermediate in size, P. palustris, foraged equally often in each of the three zones. The sites used most often by Korean populations of three tit species, P. major, P. palustris and P. ater, were similar to the sites used by European populations of the respective species. These results represent one of a few quantitative studies on mixed species flocks in continental Asia.
The presence and diversity of wild bird remains recovered from archaeological sites can be used to explore questions beyond mere subsistence strategies and wildfowling techniques. A survey of 26 avian assemblages from English Anglo-Saxon vertebrate assemblages (broadly classified into settlement types) was undertaken in order to assess if interpretable patterns of data, reflecting attributes linked to the broader nature and character of settlements and their inhabitants, could be recovered. A more limited range of species were noted from ecclesiastical rural and early trading emporia (wics) compared with the high status estate and urban centres. A case study (using data from the well stratified assemblage from Flixborough, UK), supported broad conclusions drawn from the original survey by highlighting a possible ecclesiastical avian ‘signature’ at this site during the 9th century, with elements associated with high status identified from the 8th and 10th centuries. Further, more detailed, consideration of individual avian species (particularly Gruidae, Ardeidae and raptors) also suggest their association with particular categories of sites and their significance in identifying high status pursuits such as falconry.
18
31%
Echa Leśne
|
1994
|
tom 19
|
nr 01
30-31
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