Jokimäki Jukka, Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki Marja-Liisa, Suhonen Jukka
Arctic Centre, University of Lapland, FI-96101 Rovaniemi, Finland.
Department of Biology, University of Turku, FI-20014 Turku, Finland.
Animals (Basel). 2022 Jul 17;12(14):1820. doi: 10.3390/ani12141820.
Corvids (crows, magpies, jays) live in a close association with humans, and therefore knowledge about their population status and changes will be an essential part of monitoring the quality of urban environments. Wintering bird populations can track habitat and climate changes more rapidly than breeding populations. We conducted a long-term (1991-2020) winter census of corvid species in 31 human settlements along a 920 km latitudinal gradient in Finland. We observed a total of five corvid species: the Eurasian Magpie (occurring in 114 surveys out of 122; total abundance 990 ind.), the Hooded Crow (in 96 surveys; 666 ind.), the Eurasian Jackdaw (in 51 surveys; 808 ind.), the Eurasian Jay (in 5 surveys; 6 ind.) and the Rook (in 1 survey; 1 ind.). Only the numbers of the Eurasian Jackdaw differed between the study winters, being greater at the end of the study period (2019/2020) than during the earlier winters (1991/1992 and 1999/2000). The average growth rate (λ) of the Eurasian Jackdaw increased during the study period, whereas no changes were observed in the cases of the Hooded Crow or the Eurasian Magpie. The growth rate of the Eurasian Jackdaw was greater than that observed in the Finnish bird-monitoring work, probably because our data came only from the core area of each human settlement. Even though the number of buildings and their cover increased in the study plots, and the winter temperature differed between winters, the average growth rate (λ) of corvid species did not significantly correlate with these variables. These results suggest that urban settlements are stable wintering environments for the generalist corvids. The between-species interactions were all positive, but non-significant. Despite the total number of winter-feeding sites being greater during the winter of 1991/1992 than during the winter of 2019/2020, the changes in the numbers of feeding stations did not correlate with the growth rates of any corvid species. We assume that the Eurasian Jackdaw has benefitted from the decreased persecution, and probably also from large-scale climate warming that our study design was unable to take in to account. Our results indicated that wintering corvid populations succeed well in the human settlements in Finland. We recommend conducting long-term corvid research, also during breeding season, to understand more detailed causes of the population changes of corvids along an urban gradient. Without year-round long-term monitoring data, the conservation and management recommendations related to the corvid species in urban habitats may be misleading.
鸦科鸟类(乌鸦、喜鹊、松鸦)与人类生活密切相关,因此了解它们的种群状况及其变化将是监测城市环境质量的重要组成部分。越冬鸟类种群比繁殖种群能更快地追踪栖息地和气候变化。我们在芬兰沿920公里纬度梯度的31个人类住区对鸦科物种进行了长期(1991 - 2020年)冬季普查。我们总共观察到五种鸦科鸟类:欧亚喜鹊(122次调查中有114次出现;总数量990只)、秃鼻乌鸦(96次调查;666只)、寒鸦(51次调查;808只)、欧亚松鸦(5次调查;6只)和白嘴鸦(1次调查;1只)。只有寒鸦的数量在不同研究冬季有所不同,在研究期末(2019/2020年)比早期冬季(1991/1992年和1999/2000年)更多。寒鸦的平均增长率(λ)在研究期间有所增加,而秃鼻乌鸦和欧亚喜鹊的数量没有变化。寒鸦的增长率高于芬兰鸟类监测工作中的观察值,可能是因为我们的数据仅来自每个人类住区的核心区域。尽管研究区域内建筑物数量及其覆盖面积增加,且不同冬季的冬季温度有所差异,但鸦科物种的平均增长率(λ)与这些变量没有显著相关性。这些结果表明,城市住区是泛食性鸦科鸟类稳定的越冬环境。物种间的相互作用均为正向,但不显著。尽管1991/1992年冬季的冬季喂食点总数比2019/2020年冬季更多,但喂食站数量的变化与任何鸦科物种的增长率均无关联。我们认为寒鸦受益于迫害减少,可能还受益于我们的研究设计未能考虑到的大规模气候变暖。我们的结果表明,芬兰人类住区的越冬鸦科种群生存状况良好。我们建议开展长期的鸦科研究,包括繁殖季节,以更详细地了解沿城市梯度鸦科种群变化的原因。没有全年的长期监测数据,与城市栖息地鸦科物种相关的保护和管理建议可能会产生误导。