2015
DOI: 10.1080/00063657.2015.1050993
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Using dietary analysis and habitat selection to inform conservation management of reintroduced Great BustardsOtis tardain an agricultural landscape

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Cited by 14 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Los niveles de significación (* : p < 0,05) y los rangos se muestran de acuerdo con una aleatorización de los resultados.] Legume crops were the substrate type most preferred by both sexes (Table 3), as reported in previous studies of foraging behaviour of Great Bustards (Lane et al, 1999;Gooch et al, 2015). Accordingly, the foraging area size decreased with legume availability in both sexes.…”
Section: Tablesupporting
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Los niveles de significación (* : p < 0,05) y los rangos se muestran de acuerdo con una aleatorización de los resultados.] Legume crops were the substrate type most preferred by both sexes (Table 3), as reported in previous studies of foraging behaviour of Great Bustards (Lane et al, 1999;Gooch et al, 2015). Accordingly, the foraging area size decreased with legume availability in both sexes.…”
Section: Tablesupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Both sexes are mostly herbivorous, preferring broad-leaved plants, and in some seasons also insects, seeds and fruits (Lane et al, 1999;Gooch et al, 2015;Bravo et al, 2016). However, males and females show small but significant differences in the composition of their diet when they are juveniles (Bravo et al, 2012;Gooch et al, 2015) and adults (Bravo et al, 2016). These differences result in a mean dietary overlap between adult males and females of 70%, one of the smallest known values among birds (Bravo et al, 2016).…”
Section: Speciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Better understanding the feeding ecology of a threatened endemic species through diet analysis is an essential step towards its long-term conservation and management (e.g. Gooch et al 2015;Resano-Mayor et al 2016). Trophic analyses also reveal complex trophic interactions between sympatric introduced and native species, particularly relevant to islands simultaneously threatened by several introduced species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In terms of Great Bustard conservation and management, we suggest reserves maintain unharvested fields (mung bean), stubble fields (recently harvested cereal or legume fields), and naturally unplowed lands for wintering Great Bustard. Farmland provided the main dietary plants, which is the case of the nominal subspecies (Gooch et al., ), meaning Great Bustard's dependency on the continuation of farming practices (Delibes, Corbacho, Calvo, & Fedriani, ; Martín, Martínez, Bautista, & Martin, ). This dependency, however, in the context of climate change and land‐use alteration, raises some concerns.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many studies indicate that plant items are the main food resources for Great Bustard in winter (Bravo et al, 2012;Gooch, Ashbrook, Taylor, & Székely, 2015), and vertebrate and invertebrate remains in diet are not our focus in this study. The universal P6 loop of the chloroplast trnL (UAA) intron was amplified by PCR (Taberlet et al, 2007).…”
Section: Fecal Sampling and Dietary Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%