Seasonal Variations in Breeding Success of Common Terns: Consequences of Predation
- 1 February 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Ornithological Applications
- Vol. 86 (1) , 53-60
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1367345
Abstract
We studied the breeding of 125 pairs of Common Terns (Sterna hirundo) in a large colony at Monomoy, Massaschusetts, in 1979. The colony was subjected to predation by one or more Great Horned Owls (Bubo virginianus). The adult terns deserted the colony for 6.5-8 hours each night throughout the season. Although the owl(s) took no adults and only about 20 chicks from our study plots, the terns suffered unusually heavy losses from other causes, including breakage and disappearance of eggs, hatching failures, attacks by ants (Lasius neoniger), chilling of newly-hatched chicks, and predation by Black-crowned Night-Herons (Nycticorax nycticorax). In a 10-year study, most of these causes of egg and chick loss have been associated with nocturnal desertion and predation by Great Horned Owls. Although nocturnal desertion is effective in minimizing owl predation on adults, it leaves the eggs and chicks vulnerable to chilling and predation. In 1979, both direct and indirect effects of predation fell more heavily on terns that laid in May than on terns that laid in June. Differential predation on early nesters tends to offset other factors that presumably favor early nesting.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning: Effects on Breeding TernsOrnithological Applications, 1983
- DEPENDENCE OF FLEDGING SUCCESS ON EGG‐SIZE, PARENTAL PERFORMANCE AND EGG‐COMPOSITION AMONG COMMON AND ROSEATE TERNS, STERNA HIRUNDO AND S. DOUGALLIIIbis, 1978
- Regulation of Incubation Water Loss in Eggs of Seven Species of TernsPhysiological Zoology, 1976