2023
DOI: 10.1007/s10336-023-02085-5
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Changes in over-winter prey availability, rather than winter climate, are associated with a long-term decline in a northern Tawny Owl population

Abstract: Although the associations between climate, food conditions and reproduction in the wild has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, we still know little about population level responses to climate and fluctuating food conditions in long-lived species and during longer periods of time. Here, we assessed the relative importance of the abundance of the main prey in winter (small mammals), and winter climate on population size and productivity in a Tawny Owl (Strix aluco) population in southern Finland… Show more

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“…Most of the world's owl species now appear to be experiencing global population declines [81]. High exposure and high sensitivity to ongoing and future climate change have been shown in high-latitude owls in particular [8,10,11,82]. Our research points to what may represent an important loss of habitat not just in the Southwestern US but perhaps also in many mountainous regions of arid Southwestern North America and the arid zones of the Subtropics.…”
Section: Broader-scale Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Most of the world's owl species now appear to be experiencing global population declines [81]. High exposure and high sensitivity to ongoing and future climate change have been shown in high-latitude owls in particular [8,10,11,82]. Our research points to what may represent an important loss of habitat not just in the Southwestern US but perhaps also in many mountainous regions of arid Southwestern North America and the arid zones of the Subtropics.…”
Section: Broader-scale Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 70%