2019
DOI: 10.17109/azh.65.4.381.2019
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Sympatric wintering of Red Kites and Black Kites in south-east Europe

Abstract: We characterized the spatiotemporal activities in winter grounds of the tagged Red Kites Milvus milvus originated from Austria, Czech Republic and Slovakia and wintering in southeast Europe. Birds arrived to winter grounds in Hungary, Croatia, and Greece from 10 July to 12 December (median 22 October) and departed from winter grounds between 14 February and 22 May (median 14 March), thus staying at winter grounds from 121 to 229 days (median 145, mean 161±43 SD). If we regarded kernel density estimate 80% (are… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
(19 reference statements)
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“…Despite the well-documented use of urban areas by kites (Knott et al 2009;Literák et al 2017Literák et al , 2019aPanter et al 2020), urban land cover was not a predictor of kite winter space use in our study. This may be an artefact of the large-scale approach of our study because urban land cover constituted a very small proportion of the landscape relative to more open and closed cover types.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 96%
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“…Despite the well-documented use of urban areas by kites (Knott et al 2009;Literák et al 2017Literák et al , 2019aPanter et al 2020), urban land cover was not a predictor of kite winter space use in our study. This may be an artefact of the large-scale approach of our study because urban land cover constituted a very small proportion of the landscape relative to more open and closed cover types.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 96%
“…Food is the predominant limiting resource for over‐wintering raptors, with concentrated, high‐quality food resources during winter well‐documented to negatively predict raptor home range size (Kenward 1982, Linkhart et al 1998, Tornberg and Colpaert 2001, Rolando 2002, López‐López et al 2014). Although over‐wintering kites are not strictly territorial, as evidenced by communal roosting (Literák et al 2019 a , Panter et al 2020), threshold group sizes at roosts may mediate acceptance of incomers, and earlier arrivals are more likely to secure areas with rich, concentrated resources, potentially defending these against intruders while foraging. Late arrivals, conversely, will have less choice about where to over‐winter and will consequently be more likely to inhabit less optimal habitats with sparser and more widely distributed resources, resulting in greater ranges.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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