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In many areas in Central Europe, rape culture is one of the main nectar flows for bees. The natural spring development of honey bee colonies is too late for the full utilization of nectar plants in May. It is recommended to use spring managements, which increase the amount of brood, reared in March and April, to obtain as many foragers as possible for spring flows. According to many beekeepers, uncapping of combs with winter food is a very good method of accelerating the development of bee colonies in spring. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the uncapping of winter food affects the amount of brood reared. The research was conducted in April 2007 and 2009 in south-eastern Poland. In total, 54 honey bee colonies were investigated. Winter food was uncapped in half of the colonies, and in the other half no management was used. The comparison of development in both groups was based the measurements of brood areas. It was found that the uncapping of combs with winter food in early spring had no significant effect on the amount of brood reared in honey bee colonies.
The diet of the pine marten Martes martes (Linnaeus, 1758) was studied during 16 successive winters in an uninhabited area in northern boreal Finland. The results are based on 5677 scats analyzed. The present data support earlier findings that the pine marten is an opportunistic generalist, its most favoured food apparently being small rodents, especially Clethrionamys spp. The significant year-to-year variation in the frequency of occurrence of this favoured prey in the diet of the marten correlated positively with summer trapping numbers for these species. Snow cover decreased the martens' consumption of Microtus spp, but not Clethrionomys spp. or the wood lemming Myopus schisticolor. The first real alternative in the absence of small rodents appeared to be the red squirrel Sciurus vulgaris, and in its absence carcasses of reindeer Rangifer tarandus tarandus and eggs. Other food items included birds, the mountain hare Lepus tímidas, the common frog Rana temporaria, berries and mush­rooms. There was some evidence that the occurrence of red squirrels in the diet was dependent on the abundance of both squirrels and small rodents. We suggest that in northern boreal Finland martens primarily forage for small rodents, and larger prey, which is less available and more difficult to catch, is captured incidentally.
Utilization of browse supply and moose Aices alces Linnaeus, 1758 browsing intensity in relation to tree height (0.5-3.0 m) were estimated for Scots pine in thickets and willow in willow-birch shrubs. The thickets examined provided different browse resources (0.5, 2.0 and 3.2 t dry wt/ha) and the highest utilization (about 50%) was found in the poorest one (thicket 1). In the willow-birch shrubs the use of browse was high and amounted to 85% of total production in both the winter periods studied. The number and increase of biomass of browsed twigs per stem (or plot} was generally associated with the increase of tree height. Browsing intensity depended on the tree height. Pines of 1.5-1.99 m height were characterized by the greatest browse utiliza­tion (76.3%). Moose removed significantly more biomass and twigs from pines growing in the central zone of the thicket 1 than from those growing in the marginal zone. However, in the wiilow-birch shrubs the utilization of all tree height classes was above 70% of the production and moose browsed not only the last year's growth of shoots but also that of earlier years.
Seasonal changes in the population size and habitat use of sika deer Cervus nippoti Temminek. 183S in the high Tanzawa Mountains were studied. Deer exhibited sea­sonal movements different than those usually observed in the mountains. Because dwarf bamboo, their main winter food, recently occurs only in the high Tanzawa Mts, deer concentrated at the high altitude in late autumn and moved down in winter, after the reduction of bamboo biomass. The most utilized habitat types were forest clearings due to the highest food biomass available. Closed woodland was selected mostly in autumn and winter when deer often fed on fallen leaves and tree bark. Open woodland without bamboo in the understory was highly avoided. Sika deer population in the Tanzawa Mts should be kept at the stable level, which would enable recovery of vegetation. Because recent shrinking in bamboo distribution occurs mostly due to deer grazing pressure in winter, it was suggested to manage habitats in the low mountains in the way to make them attractive to deer also during winter. Supplemental feeding in the low mountains should be also considered.
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