INVESTIGADORES
GRANDE Juan manuel
artículos
Título:
Raptors entanglement with human debris at nest, a patchy and species specific problem
Autor/es:
MALLET, J.; LIÉBANA, M. S.; SANTILLÁN, M. A.; GRANDE, J. M.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF RAPTOR RESEARCH
Editorial:
RAPTOR RESEARCH FOUNDATION INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Lawrence, Kansas; Año: 2020 vol. 54 p. 316 - 318
ISSN:
0892-1016
Resumen:
Several species of birds, including raptors, add man-made objects, stones, greenplants, skins and dung of animals to build and decorate their nests. However, there is acompromise between the use of new nesting material and the increased risk of nestlingmortality due to entanglement or ingestion of debris. Here, we present a compilation ofcases of entanglement in raptors and specifically in a very common but poorly studiedSouth American raptor. We observed the decoration in 86 of 95 (90,5%) nests ofSouthern Caracara ( Caracara plancus ) in an agricultural area of La Pampa province.Caracaras mainly incorporated agricultural twine in their nests and nestlingssometimes got entangled and died. We found 2 occurrences of entanglement duringnine years of study. Decorating the nest, or at least to lean its interior with nylon twine, can impose a relevant death toll to Southern Caracaras, as has been found in other species elsewhere. Extension campaigns to reduce the misuse and the final disposal of debris materials such as baling twine in agricultural landscapes will be required to reduce this anthropic source of mortality in a species that although still common, is apparently reducing its numbers with the expansion of intensive agriculture.