Abstract
Since 1986, I have carried out an intensive field survey of 10 000-30 000 pairs of a sand martin ( Riparia riparia ) population. Direct survey of the size and distribution of the breeding population and estimation of adult survival rates by SURGE, based on extensive ringing data sets, allow us to analyze the effects of different environmental factors with high precision. The model selection showed that the S s+t , P t model, in which the survival rates differ by sex for adults and vary in parallel by year and the capture rate varies by year, fits the data. The adult females had a lower survival rate compared to the males. The capture rate could be modelled as a quotient of the number of captured birds and the number of breeding birds along the upper part of the river Tisza. The survival rates of adults were related to the rainfall of the southern Sahel, which has an important role in the extension of the winter foraging habitat in the Sahel. Although the severe decrease in the population size, which may reach 50%, coincided with a large decline in the adult survival rate, there was not a significant relation between the adult survival rate and population size during the studied period. The population recruitment by first breeders and immigrant-emigrant adults could have a key role in the determination of population size. In the case of the studied subpopulation along the river, which is a core of the Carpathian Bend population, the immigration-emigration of adults had an important effect on the population size. The significant difference between juvenile male and female dispersal indicates the importance of separate estimation of juvenile survival for the sexes in further studies.