38 results on '"Antony J. Morris"'
Search Results
2. Assessing rates of parasite coinfection and spatiotemporal strain variation via metabarcoding: Insights for the conservation of European turtle doves Streptopelia turtur
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Rebecca C. Thomas, Jenny C. Dunn, Deborah A. Dawson, Helen Hipperson, Gavin J. Horsburgh, Antony J. Morris, Chris Orsman, John Mallord, Philip V. Grice, Keith C. Hamer, Cyril Eraud, Lormée Hervé, and Simon J. Goodman
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C410 Applied Genetics ,Bird Diseases ,Coinfection ,C111 Parasitology ,Trichomonas ,Genetics ,D447 Environmental Conservation ,Animals ,Parasites ,C180 Ecology ,Columbidae ,Haemosporida ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Understanding the frequency, spatiotemporal dynamics and impacts of parasite coinfections is fundamental to developing control measures and predicting disease impacts. The European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur) is one of Europe’s most threatened bird species. High prevalence of infection by the protozoan parasite Trichomonas gallinae has previously been identified, but the role of this and other coinfecting parasites in turtle dove declines remains unclear. Using a high-throughput sequencing approach, we identified seven strains of T. gallinae, including two novel strains, from ITS1/5.8S/ITS2 ribosomal sequences in turtle doves on breeding and wintering grounds, with further intra-strain variation and four novel sub-types revealed by the iron-hydrogenase gene. High spatiotemporal turnover was observed in T. gallinae strain composition, and infection was prevalent in all populations (89–100%). Coinfection by multiple Trichomonas strains was rarer than expected (1% observed compared to 38.6% expected), suggesting either within-host competition, or high mortality of coinfected individuals. In contrast, coinfection by multiple haemosporidians was common (43%), as was coinfection by haemosporidians and T. gallinae (90%), with positive associations between strains of T. gallinae and Leucocytozoon suggesting a mechanism such as parasite-induced immune modulation. We found no evidence for negative associations between coinfections and host body condition. We suggest that longitudinal studies involving the recapture and investigation of infection status of individuals over their lifespan are crucial to understand the epidemiology of coinfections in natural populations.
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- 2022
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3. Successful storage of Trichomonas gallinae on Whatman FTA cards following culture
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Rebecca C. Thomas, Jenny C. Dunn, Chris J. Orsman, Antony J. Morris, Helen Hipperson, Philip V. Grice, Keith C. Hamer, and Simon J. Goodman
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C432 Veterinary Genetics ,C400 Genetics ,C111 Parasitology ,Genetics ,C100 Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Logistical constraints concerning parasite sample storage can hinder progress with the discovery of genetic variation on a global scale. New storage methods are being developed to address this, but require testing in order to understand how widely applicable these methods are. Whatman FTA cards have been tested previously under laboratory conditions for storing low-concentration Trichomonas gallinae isolates with the conclusion that they are not suitable, but have not been tested under field conditions. Here, we conducted a field-test, comparing FTA cards with storage in ethanol for T. gallinae samples collected and cultured from wild Columbiformes in Africa using standard field methods, before transportation to the UK. After 6 months storage, both methods resulted in an overall prevalence of 100% following PCR amplification (n = 59), suggesting that FTA cards are suitable for estimation of T. gallinae prevalence. However, samples stored in ethanol produced more, and longer, sequences than those stored on FTA cards. These data suggest storage in ethanol is preferable for the acquisition of high quality genetic strain data, but that FTA cards can be used successfully to ascertain infection prevalence and identify parasite strains under field conditions.
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- 2022
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4. Reversing declines in farmland birds: How much agri-environment provision is needed at farm and landscape scales?
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Elwyn Sharps, Robert W. Hawkes, Andrew J. Bladon, David L. Buckingham, Jennifer Border, Antony J. Morris, Philip V. Grice, Will J. Peach, Sharps, E [0000-0002-5177-5258], Hawkes, RW [0000-0001-6754-6794], Bladon, AJ [0000-0002-2677-1247], Border, J [0000-0001-9481-6809], Morris, AJ [0000-0003-1422-1237], Peach, WJ [0000-0002-4242-910X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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environmental stewardship scheme ,Ecology ,farmland biodiversity ,farmland bird index ,conservation targeting ,landscape-scale conservation ,common agricultural policy ,sustainable farming ,rural development - Abstract
Funder: Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Agri‐environment schemes (AES) are the primary policy mechanism for addressing farmland biodiversity declines across Europe. Despite previous studies on the impacts of AES on biodiversity, there is little empirical evidence on the scale of provision required to reverse declines. Across three regions of lowland England with contrasting farm systems (arable, pastoral, mixed), we estimated avian population growth rates (PGRs) on farmland with high AES provision (‘higher‐tier’: average bird‐friendly option cover = 7.4%), low AES provision (‘lower‐tier’: 2.3%) and no bird‐friendly AES (‘no AES’). Ten‐year PGRs were derived for 24 species and three multi‐species groups comprising farmland‐associated species (‘farmland birds’), species of conservation concern (‘priority birds’) and species restricted to farmland (‘specialist birds’). We used PGRs to simulate the proportion of the regional farmland landscape that would have to be assigned to higher‐ and lower‐tier agreements to stabilise or increase populations. In the arable and pastoral regions, 13/23 and 13/22 species, respectively, had more positive PGRs under higher‐tier AES than on no AES farmland (none had more negative PGRs), compared to 4/22 (positive) and 1/22 (negative) in the mixed region. Only two to four species per region exhibited more positive PGRs under lower‐tier AES compared to no AES farmland. Multi‐species PGRs in the arable and pastoral regions increased from no AES (strong decline), to lower‐tier (decline or stability) to higher‐tier (moderate or strong increase). There was no overall AES effect in the mixed region. To increase regional farmland bird populations by 10% over 10 years, 47% and 26% of the farmed landscape would need to be devoted to higher‐tier agreements in arable and pastoral landscapes respectively. This falls to 34% and 17% when higher‐tier is targeted at localities supporting higher abundances of target species, and to 29% and 10% when 30% of the farmed landscape is also devoted to lower‐tier. Priority and specialist birds require higher provision levels. Policy implications. Where farmland bird recovery is an AES objective, farms should prioritise higher‐tier agreement delivery over lower‐tier. Farmland bird responses to AES provision are likely to vary regionally, but careful targeting will reduce the amount needed in the landscape.
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- 2023
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5. Effects of seed-rich habitat provision on territory density, home range and breeding performance of European Turtle Doves Streptopelia turtur
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Philip V. Grice, Jenny C. Dunn, Antony J. Morris, and Will J. Peach
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,Home range ,Foraging ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Grassland ,Streptopelia turtur ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Habitat ,law ,Abundance (ecology) ,Seasonal breeder ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Turtle (robot) ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
SummaryConservation measures providing food-rich habitats through agri-environment schemes (AES) have the potential to affect the demography and local abundance of species limited by food availability. The European Turtle Dove Streptopelia turtur is one of Europe’s fastest declining birds, with breeding season dietary changes coincident with a reduction in reproductive output suggesting food limitation during breeding. In this study we provided seed-rich habitats at six intervention sites over a 4-year period and tested for impacts of the intervention on breeding success, ranging behaviour and the local abundance of territorial turtle doves. Nesting success and chick biometrics were unrelated to the local availability of seed-rich habitat or to the proximity of intervention plots. Nestling weight was higher close to human habitation consistent with an influence of anthropogenic supplementary food provision. Small home ranges were associated with a high proportion of non-farmed habitats, while large home ranges were more likely to contain seed-rich habitat suggesting that breeding doves were willing to travel further to utilize such habitat where available. Extensively managed grassland and intervention plot fields were selected by foraging turtle doves. A slower temporal decline in the abundance of breeding males on intervention sites probably reflects enhanced habitat suitability during territory settlement. Refining techniques to deliver sources of sown, natural, and supplementary seed that are plentiful, accessible, and parasite-free is likely to be crucial for the conservation of turtle doves.
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- 2020
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6. The genome sequence of the European turtle dove, Streptopelia turtur Linnaeus 1758
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Karen Oliver, Craig Corton, Jonathan Threlfall, Keith C. Hamer, Richard Challis, Michelle Smith, Jale Dolucan, Jason Skelton, Michael A. Quail, James Torrance, Daniel Mead, Sarah Pelan, William Chow, Kerstin Howe, Shane A. McCarthy, Mark Blaxter, Ying Sims, Marcela Uliano-Silva, Jenny C. Dunn, Philip V. Grice, Antony J. Morris, and Emma Betteridge
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Whole genome sequencing ,0303 health sciences ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Sequence assembly ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Streptopelia turtur ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Evolutionary biology ,law ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,C400 Genetics ,Columbidae ,Turtle (robot) ,Dove ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
We present a genome assembly from an individual female Streptopelia turtur (the European turtle dove; Chordata; Aves; Columbidae). The genome sequence is 1.18 gigabases in span. The majority of the assembly is scaffolded into 35 chromosomal pseudomolecules, with the W and Z sex chromosomes assembled.
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- 2021
7. Have Welsh agri‐environment schemes delivered for focal species? Results from a comprehensive monitoring programme
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James Skates, Michael A. MacDonald, Stephen Dodd, Trevor D. Dines, Ruth L. Angell, Rob Parry, Karen A. Haysom, Antony J. Morris, Catharine H. Shellswell, Elizabeth M. Wilberforce, Vaughn Matthews, G. Tordoff, Ian Johnstone, and Russel Hobson
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Welsh ,Geography ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,language ,Focal species ,Arable land ,business ,language.human_language - Published
- 2019
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8. Effects of higher-tier agri-environment scheme on the abundance of priority farmland birds
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Andrew Cristinacce, Leila K. Walker, D. Dadam, Philip V. Grice, Antony J. Morris, and Will J. Peach
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,Land management ,Biodiversity ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Agricultural intensification ,Geography ,Habitat ,Abundance (ecology) ,Rural area ,Common Agricultural Policy ,Relative species abundance ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Agri‐environment schemes (AES) are the main policy mechanism available for reversing the widespread declines of European farmland biodiversity. We assessed the impact of AES land management on the abundance of bird species whose populations have declined as a consequence of agricultural intensification. The AES involved the deployment of a whole‐farm package of wildlife‐friendly land management options covering an average of 7% of the farmed area. The study was conducted across three English regions and focused on species of conservation concern and on a wider suite of farmland birds comprising the UK Government's Farmland Bird Indicator (FBI). Changes in avian abundance on AES farms were compared with those measured across the wider farmed landscape as part of a national bird monitoring scheme. Twelve out of 17 priority species, and the FBI, showed more positive changes in abundance on AES farms in at least one region. Eight species exhibited sustained responses to AES management in at least one region, and eight species exhibited a temporary enhancement in abundance in at least one region. Temporary responses to AES management followed a large scale failure of key AES options to establish during successive wet and cold summers, and involved species known to depend on the habitats provided by these options. In order to offset ongoing declines of FBI species in the wider farmed countryside of 2.3–4.1% per annum, we estimate 26–33% of FBI populations would need to be subject to AES‐type management. This study demonstrates the potential for AES land management to substantially enhance the abundance of priority farmland birds and highlights the need for option packages that are resilient to the impacts of variable weather conditions.
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- 2018
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9. Post-fledging habitat selection in a rapidly declining farmland bird, the European Turtle Dove Streptopelia turtur
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Jenny C. Dunn, Antony J. Morris, and Philip V. Grice
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0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,biology ,Foraging ,Fledge ,C120 Behavioural Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Streptopelia turtur ,010605 ornithology ,law.invention ,Nest ,Habitat ,law ,Juvenile ,C100 Biology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,C180 Ecology ,Turtle (robot) ,Dove ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
SummaryPost-fledging survival plays a vital role in the dynamics of bird populations and yet is the least-studied avian life-stage. Habitat requirements post-fledging may have important implications for behaviour and survival, especially for declining populations in landscapes that have undergone wide-scale anthropogenic modification, resulting in an altered distribution and composition of habitats. The European Turtle Dove is a widespread but rapidly declining species both within the UK and across Europe. Reduced seed food availability is thought to influence breeding success of this species, but it is not known whether post-fledging survival may also be influenced by seed availability. Here, we use leg-ring radio-tag attachments to monitor post-fledging survival and movements in 15 Turtle Dove nestlings from eight nests monitored during 2014 as part of a wider autecological study. Fledglings remained in close proximity to their nest for three weeks post-tagging, spending more than half their time in the immediate vicinity (within ∼20 m) of the nest. 95% of foraging trips during this period were within 329 m of the nest and fledglings selected seed-rich habitat (semi-natural grassland, low-intensity grazing, fallow and quarries). Fledglings that were heavier and in better body condition at seven days old were more likely to survive for 30 days post-fledging, and the proportion of available seed-rich habitat was a strong predictor of nestling weight and condition at seven days old. Whilst our sample size is modest, this study highlights the crucial role of food availability in juvenile survival, both while adults are feeding nestlings, and to recently fledged young, and the potential for agri-environment schemes providing foraging and nesting habitats in close proximity to provide important benefits.
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- 2016
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10. Making explicit agricultural ecosystem service trade-offs: a case study of an English lowland arable farm
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Matthew J. Carroll, Antony J. Morris, Rob H. Field, and Rachel K. Hill
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0106 biological sciences ,Economics and Econometrics ,Food security ,business.industry ,Agroforestry ,Crop yield ,Biodiversity ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Geography ,Agriculture ,Greenhouse gas ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Arable land ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Cropping - Abstract
European farmland hosts a species assemblage of animals and plants which have undergone declines through the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, at least partly as a result of increased productivity. Further increases in human populations, changes in availability and cost of raw materials, policy constraints, price volatility and climatic changes will further drive greater efficiency and high yields in agriculture, with the risk of further adverse environmental impacts. We assess the effects of different management priorities (production-driven cropping vs. wildlife-friendly farming) at an arable farm in eastern England on food production, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and biodiversity. We modelled one actual and three alternative cropping scenarios using actual yields from the farm over 13 years, to calculate total yields and those foregone for agri-environmental measures. We measured crop yields, relative abundance of 19 farmland bird species, and CO2 and N2O emissions related to crop prod...
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- 2015
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11. Higher-tier agri-environment scheme enhances breeding densities of some priority farmland birds in England
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Rob H. Field, Andrew I. Cooke, Jennifer A. Bright, Leila K. Walker, Will J. Peach, Jeremy Fern, Philip V. Grice, and Antony J. Morris
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Animal breeding ,Ecology ,biology ,business.industry ,Agroforestry ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Population density ,Geography ,Habitat ,Abundance (ecology) ,Agricultural land ,Agriculture ,Animal Science and Zoology ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Lapwing - Abstract
Agri-environment schemes (AES) are the main policy mechanism available to reverse the widespread losses of farmland biodiversity across Europe. Previous examples of AES enhancing the abundance of farmland birds have been restricted to targeted species recovery programmes, often with bespoke habitat management and high levels of advisory support for landowners. Here, we tested whether standard higher-tier AES agreements targeted at multiple species and with lower levels of advisory support than targeted species recovery programmes can enhance the breeding densities of farmland birds. Surveys of breeding birds were undertaken during 2008 and 2011 on 65 farms under higher level stewardship (HLS) and 21 farms lacking AES interventions, in three regions of England. After allowing for any impacts of predator control, changes in density were more positive on HLS farms in at least one region for six priority species. Five of the six species had mixed diets and were predominantly associated with field edges; the other (lapwing) probably responded to the provision of field-centre fallow plots. Changes in bird numbers were not consistently related to the extent of AES habitat provision. This is the first study to demonstrate that standard AES management without substantial ongoing advisory support can increase or maintain the densities of widespread declining species.
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- 2015
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12. Testing bespoke management of foraging habitat for European turtle doves Streptopelia turtur
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Antony J. Morris, Jenny C. Dunn, and Philip V. Grice
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Ecology ,biology ,Foraging ,Biodiversity ,Vegetation ,Topping ,Turtur ,biology.organism_classification ,Streptopelia turtur ,Agronomy ,Habitat ,Scarification ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Agri-environment schemes (AES) are increasingly being employed to mitigate biodiversity loss in agricultural environments. The European Turtle Dove Streptopelia turtur is an obligate granivorous bird in rapid decline within both the UK (−96% since 1970) and across continental Europe (−77% since 1980), despite widespread uptake of AES. Here, we assess the efficacy of a potentially new, sown agri-environment option designed to provide abundant, accessible seed for S. turtur during the breeding season. During summer 2011 we compared vegetation structure and seed provision on trial plots to control habitat types (existing agri-environment options thought to potentially provide S. turtur foraging habitat) to assess whether trial plots performed better for foraging S. turtur than control habitats. In September 2011 all trial plots were topped (cut) and half of a subset of trial plots were then scarified (60% of soil surface disturbed). Vegetation structure on topped, and topped and scarified trial plots was measured during summer 2012 to determine which management regime was most effective in maintaining suitable sward structure and seed provision into the second year. No control habitat type produced as much seed important in S. turtur diet as trial plots at any point during year one. Trial plots provided accessible vegetation structure early in the season with no difference in vegetation metrics between trial plots and previously published data on S. turtur foraging locations. However, to allow later access, management is required during mid-June to open up the sward through localized topping or scarification. Vegetation structure during year two was generally too dense to attract foraging S. turtur. However, scarifying trial plots during the September following sowing encouraged self-seeding of Fumaria officinalis (a plant species historically forming a significant proportion of S. turtur diet during the breeding season) into the second year, with this species present in 16% of scarified trial plots compared to only 4% of topped trial plots during year two. Thus, autumn scarification, possibly followed by topping or scarification of part of the trial plots in June, is necessary for trial plots to provide more seed and access for S. turtur than existing agri-environment options during year two. We recommend modifications to our original seed mix in order to reduce vegetation density and improve vegetation structure. The study provides an example of the need to strike the right balance between food abundance and accessibility, through vegetation structure, when designing agri-environment scheme management options that provide food for birds.
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- 2015
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13. Influence of agri-environment scheme options on territory settlement by Yellowhammer (Emberiza citronella) and Corn Bunting (Emberiza calandra)
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Antony J. Morris, Philip V. Grice, Andrew I. Cooke, Rob H. Field, Jenny A. Bright, Malcolm D. Burgess, and Will J. Peach
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biology ,business.industry ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,Foraging ,Yellowhammer ,music.producer ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Geography ,Habitat ,Agriculture ,Corn bunting ,Arable land ,business ,music ,Emberiza - Abstract
Conserving farmland birds is a key objective for agri-environment schemes (AES) across Europe, with a number of management options aimed at providing invertebrate food and nesting habitats. We analysed territory settlement by two widespread but declining farmland buntings with contrasting nesting requirements: the Yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella, a boundary-nesting species, and the Corn Bunting Emberiza calandra, a ground-nesting species. The study was conducted on farms participating in the English Higher Level Stewardship scheme to test whether territory settlement is influenced by the provision of key arable AES options. Both species settled preferentially in localities containing sown arable field margins, while Corn Bunting also settled in localities containing nectar flower mixtures. These preferences are likely to reflect foraging rather than nesting habitat requirements. Yellowhammer selected territories containing hedgerows under AES management, which are nesting rather than foraging habitat but may also provide food. Uptake by land owners of several AES options likely to provide limiting resources for farmland birds was very low, and because uptake at the landscape scale is also low, wider-scale population level benefits are likely to be constrained. However, this is one of few studies demonstrating selection of widely applied arable AES options by breeding farmland birds.
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- 2015
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14. The decline of the Turtle Dove: Dietary associations with body condition and competition with other columbids analysed using high-throughput sequencing
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Jenny C, Dunn, Jennifer E, Stockdale, Rosemary J, Moorhouse-Gann, Alexandra, McCubbin, Helen, Hipperson, Antony J, Morris, Philip V, Grice, and William O C, Symondson
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Dietary changes linked to the availability of anthropogenic food resources can have complex implications for species and ecosystems, especially when species are in decline. Here, we use recently developed primers targeting the ITS2 region of plants to characterize diet from faecal samples of four UK columbids, with particular focus on the European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur), a rapidly declining obligate granivore. We examine dietary overlap between species (potential competition), associations with body condition in turtle doves and spatiotemporal variation in diet. We identified 143 taxonomic units, of which we classified 55% to species, another 34% to genus and the remaining 11% to family. We found significant dietary overlap between all columbid species, with the highest between turtle doves and stock doves (Columba oenas), then between turtle doves and woodpigeons (Columba palumbus). The lowest overlap was between woodpigeons and collared doves (Streptopelia decaocto). We show considerable change in columbid diets compared to previous studies, probably reflecting opportunistic foraging behaviour by columbids within a highly anthropogenically modified landscape, although our data for nonturtle doves should be considered preliminary. Nestling turtle doves in better condition had a higher dietary proportion of taxonomic units from natural arable plant species and a lower proportion of taxonomic units from anthropogenic food resources such as garden bird seed mixes and brassicas. This suggests that breeding ground conservation strategies for turtle doves should include provision of anthropogenic seeds for adults early in the breeding season, coupled with habitat rich in accessible seeds from arable plants once chicks have hatched.
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- 2017
15. High rates of infection by blood parasites during the nestling phase in UK Columbids with notes on ecological associations
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Philip V. Grice, Jenny C. Dunn, Antony J. Morris, Alexandra McCubbin, Simon J. Goodman, Keith C. Hamer, Jennifer E. Stockdale, and Emma L Bradford
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Male ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Plasmodium ,Leucocytozoon ,medicine.medical_specialty ,C111 Parasitology ,Parasitemia ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Nesting Behavior ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nest ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Gametocyte ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Columbidae ,Protozoan Infections, Animal ,C440 Molecular Genetics ,Ecology ,biology ,Bird Diseases ,Host (biology) ,Apparent infection rate ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Haemosporida ,biology.organism_classification ,United Kingdom ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology ,Haemoproteus ,C180 Ecology ,Apicomplexa - Abstract
SUMMARYStudies of blood parasite infection in nestling birds rarely find a high prevalence of infection. This is likely due to a combination of short nestling periods (limiting the age at which nestlings can be sampled) and long parasite prepatent periods before gametocytes can be detected in peripheral blood. Here we examine rates of blood parasite infection in nestlings from three Columbid species in the UK. We use this system to address two key hypotheses in the epidemiology of avian haemoparasites: first, that nestlings in open nests have a higher prevalence of infection; and second, that nestlings sampled at 14 days old have a higher apparent infection rate than those sampled at 7 days old. Open-nesting individuals had a 54% infection rate compared with 25% for box-nesters, probably due to an increased exposure of open-nesting species to dipteran vectors. Nestlings sampled at 14 days had a 68% infection rate compared with 32% in nestlings sampled at 7 days, suggesting that rates of infection in the nest are high. Further work should examine nestlings post-fledging to identify rates of successful parasite infection (as opposed to abortive development within a dead-end host) as well as impacts on host post-fledging survival and behaviour.
- Published
- 2017
16. Effect of plot type, age and date on seed depletion and bird use of Wild Bird Seed Mixtures in England
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Andrew I. Cooke, Jennifer A. Bright, Philip V. Grice, Rob H. Field, Antony J. Morris, Will J. Peach, and Jeremy Fern
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Animal science ,Abundance (ecology) ,Botany ,Bunting ,food and beverages ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Seed mixture ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Capsule Bird and seed abundances decreased in both standard and enhanced Agri-Environment Scheme seed mixtures (plots of seed-bearing crops) between November and February.Aims We analysed effects of Agri-Environment seed mixture type (‘standard’ or ‘enhanced’), plot age and non-target species on seed and bird abundance.Methods Surveys were conducted in November/December and January/February on 36 standard and 19 enhanced seed mixtures to test effect of plot type and age on abundance of buntings, finches and seeds.Results Bunting and finch densities decreased between January/February and November/December. Seed decreased by approximately 70% between surveys, plot type did not affect depletion. Second-year plots contained nearly 90% less seed, and non-significantly lower bunting and finch densities. Bunting densities were positively related to cereal seed abundance, and finch densities to non-cereal seed; these relationships did not differ between plot types. There was no evidence that non-target species af...
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- 2014
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17. The protozoan parasite Trichomonas gallinae causes adult and nestling mortality in a declining population of European Turtle Doves, Streptopelia turtur
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Danaë K. Sheehan, Antony J. Morris, Philip V. Grice, Jenny C. Dunn, Keith C. Hamer, Jennifer E. Stockdale, and Simon J. Goodman
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Male ,Population ,Trichomonas Infections ,Zoology ,Trichomonas gallinae ,law.invention ,Asphyxia ,law ,Animals ,Wings, Animal ,Parasite hosting ,Galliformes ,Turtle (robot) ,Columbidae ,education ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Bird Diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,Protozoan parasite ,Streptopelia turtur ,Infectious Diseases ,Starvation ,Trichomonas ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology - Abstract
SUMMARYStudies incorporating the ecology of clinical and sub-clinical disease in wild populations of conservation concern are rare. Here we examine sub-clinical infection by Trichomonas gallinae in a declining population of free-living European Turtle Doves and suggest caseous lesions cause mortality in adults and nestlings through subsequent starvation and/or suffocation. We found a 100% infection rate by T. gallinae in adult and nestling Turtle Doves (n = 25) and observed clinical signs in three adults and four nestlings (28%). Adults with clinical signs displayed no differences in any skeletal measures of size but had a mean 3·7% reduction in wing length, with no overlap compared to those without clinical signs. We also identified T. gallinae as the suggested cause of mortality in one Red-legged Partridge although disease presentation was different. A minimum of four strains of T. gallinae, characterized at the ITS/5·8S/ITS2 ribosomal region, were isolated from Turtle Doves. However, all birds with clinical signs (Turtle Doves and the Red-legged Partridge) carried a single strain of T. gallinae, suggesting that parasite spill over between Columbidae and Galliformes is a possibility that should be further investigated. Overall, we highlight the importance of monitoring populations for sub-clinical infection rather than just clinical disease.
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- 2014
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18. Influence of crop type and Agri-Environment management on the use of over-winter stubbles by farmland birds in England
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Jennifer A. Bright, Will J. Peach, Andrew I. Cooke, Jeremy Fern, Rob H. Field, Philip V. Grice, and Antony J. Morris
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,Population ,Winter wheat ,Bunting ,Vegetation ,biology.organism_classification ,Crop ,Geography ,Agronomy ,Agricultural land ,education ,Environment management ,Cropping ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Capsule Bunting densities decreased in winter wheat stubbles between November/December and January/February, but not in spring barley stubbles.Aims We investigated bird use and vegetation in relation to Agri-Environment Scheme over-winter stubble type and preceding crop.Methods We surveyed 15–17 fields each of: ‘standard’ Agri-Environment Scheme stubble on Entry Level Stewardship farms (EF6); ‘standard’ Agri-Environment Scheme stubble on Higher Level Stewardship farms (HF6); stubble preceded by low-input cereal (HF15); extended over-winter stubble (EF22) and non-Agri-Environment Scheme stubble in November/December 2011 and January/February 2012. Stubbles were preceded by spring barley or winter wheat crops.Results Previous cropping and time of year were the main factors influencing bird densities: bunting densities declined in winter wheat stubbles between surveys, but not in spring barley stubbles.Conclusion The main factor limiting the ability of over-winter stubbles to reverse national population trend...
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- 2014
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19. Higher-tier agri-environment schemes: do they work and how much do we need to recover farmland birds?
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Philip V. Grice, D. Dadam, Andrew Cristinacce, L. K. Walker, Antony J. Morris, and Will J. Peach
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0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,Work (electrical) ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Business ,Environmental economics ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Published
- 2018
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20. Non-cultured faecal and gastrointestinal seed samples fail to detect Trichomonad infection in clinically and sub-clinically infected columbid birds
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Jenny C. Dunn, William Oliver Christian Symondson, Antony J. Morris, Keith C. Hamer, Alexandra McCubbin, Simon J. Goodman, Rebecca C. Thomas, Philip V. Grice, and Jennifer E. Stockdale
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,QL ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Trichomoniasis ,biology ,Trichomonas ,C111 Parasitology ,Trichomonas gallinae ,medicine.disease ,Oral cavity ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Streptopelia turtur ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,C430 Medical and Veterinary Genetics ,D323 Animal Pathology ,Genetics ,medicine ,Emerging infectious disease ,Parasite hosting ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Trichomonosis, caused by the protozoan Trichomonas gallinae, is an emerging infectious disease in finches, and is more commonly found in columbids and raptors. Infections can be sub-clinical or cause morbidity and mortality, but the parasite is currently only detectable by incubation of an oral swab. Here, we test whether T. gallinae parasites can be detected by PCR from faecal or non-cultured samples from the oral cavity and gastrointestinal tract of infected Turtle Doves (Streptopelia turtur). PCR did not detect T. gallinae parasites in any faecal samples screened, and in only 1 of 11 oral/gastrointestinal samples (from the mouth of a nestling suspected to have died from trichomonosis). We conclude that both oral swabs and parasite culture are still necessary to detect the sub-clinical presence of T. gallinae infection in birds.
- Published
- 2016
21. Which features of UK farmland are important in retaining territories of the rapidly declining Turtle DoveStreptopelia turtur?
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Antony J. Morris and Jenny C. Dunn
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biology ,Ecology ,Foraging ,D447 Environmental Conservation ,biology.organism_classification ,Streptopelia turtur ,law.invention ,Population decline ,Geography ,Habitat ,Abundance (ecology) ,law ,C910 Applied Biological Sciences ,C180 Ecology ,Detection rate ,Turtle (robot) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Dove ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Capsule Turtle Doves continue to show a strong population decline; territories were more likely to be retained in areas with more nesting habitat, and more suitable foraging habitat. Aim To determine which features of farmland in England are important for retaining Turtle Dove territories Methods Fifty-eight grid squares with recent records of territorial Turtle Doves were resurveyed, and squares retaining Turtle Dove territories compared with those from which Turtle Doves had been lost. Results Turtle Dove territories were detected in 48% of squares resurveyed. When correcting for the 70% detection rate of the survey methodology, territories were present in 66% of squares surveyed suggesting a 34% decline over a 2-year period. Established scrub and hedgerows > 4 m tall positively influenced Turtle Dove presence and abundance, as did standing water. Bare ground and fallow had positive effects on Turtle Dove abundance whereas grazed land negatively impacted abundance. Conclusion The positive effects of area of established scrub and volume of large hedgerows are likely to represent a declining density of birds selecting the best quality nest sites. We suggest instead that foraging habitat may be limiting distribution.
- Published
- 2012
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22. Assessing the implications of the loss of set-aside for farmland birds
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Antony J. Morris, Ian G. Henderson, Juliet A. Vickery, and Simon Gillings
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biology ,Agroforestry ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Biodiversity ,Alauda ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Geography ,Habitat ,Set-aside ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Arable land ,Bird conservation ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Between 1988 and 2007, set-aside, a European Commission production control measure, took an average of 10% of arable farmland in the EU out of production each year. In 2007, the set-aside rate was set to 0% and the scheme was later abandoned altogether. By assessing associations of farmland birds with set-aside and quantifying the extent of set-aside loss, this study aims to assess the implications of set-aside loss for farmland bird conservation. During the lifespan of set-aside, a large number of studies assessed the biodiversity value of set-aside and other agricultural crops and habitats. Where possible we considered measurable benefits of set-aside. However, some studies did not specify the type of set-aside and in some cases set-aside fields were grouped with cereal stubble fields. In these cases, we took the pragmatic approach of assessing the value of generic stubble fields as a conservative minimum estimate of the value of set-aside fields. A re-analysis of data from 30 intensive studies demonstrates that farmland bird densities tended to be higher on set-aside than on either cereal or oilseed rape crops. Without mitigation, these are the two crops likely to replace most set-aside fields. We estimate that 26–52% of the farmland populations of key granivorous passerines were present on stubble fields, giving an indication of the proportion of birds likely to be present on set-aside fields within this broader category. An extensive survey of lowland farmland during winters 1999/2000, 2000/2001 and 2002/2003, repeated in February 2008, showed a doubling of the number of 1-km squares with no stubble and a halving of the number of squares with more than 10 ha of stubble. After set-aside abandonment, 72% of squares had no stubble in the important late winter period, confirming that many of the former stubble fields were retained as set-aside. A simple correlative model suggests that this could cause a small increase in the rate of decline of Skylark Alauda arvensis and Yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella populations, assuming causal links between stubble area and demography. However, even if this assumption cannot be supported, these results clearly indicate that a significant proportion of some farmland bird populations will need to find alternative breeding and foraging habitats.
- Published
- 2010
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23. Close to the edge: predation risks for two declining farmland passerines
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James J. Gilroy and Antony J. Morris
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High rate ,Nest ,biology ,Ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Alauda ,Yellow wagtail ,Motacilla flava ,Arable land ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Predation - Abstract
Data on the breeding success of two crop-nesting passerines, Skylark Alauda arvensis and Yellow Wagtail Motacilla flava, were collected in relation to linear features within and surrounding arable crops. Both species were found to experience high rates of nest predation with increased proximity to field boundaries, although the exact nature of the relationship differed with species and, in the case of Skylark, with boundary type. Most nest losses were attributable to predation. During 2006 video cameras deployed on Skylark nests showed that all recorded predation was by mammals of various species, and that these were most active in or around grass margins. The results suggest that further research is needed into ways of minimizing negative impacts of predation on Skylarks. Possible solutions discussed include concentrating Skylark Plots in the field centres away from grass margins and promoting Skylark Plots in fields without grass margins in future agri-environmental schemes.
- Published
- 2008
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24. Twenty years of local farmland bird conservation: the effects of management on avian abundance at two UK demonstration sites
- Author
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Chris M. Bailey, Nicholas J. Aebischer, David W. Gibbons, Will J. Peach, Antony J. Morris, and Chris Stoate
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,010605 ornithology ,Geography ,Habitat ,Abundance (ecology) ,Arable land ,Bird conservation ,Predator ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Wildlife conservation - Abstract
Capsule At two demonstration farms, Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust's Loddington Farm in Leicestershire and Royal Society for the Protection of Birds's Hope Farm in Cambridgeshire, targeted management led to much faster increases in avian abundance than in the surrounding regions. Aims To compare changes in avian abundance at Loddington Farm since 1992 and Hope Farm since 2000, and relate these to regional trends in bird abundance and to the habitat and predator management conducted at the two sites. Methods Loddington Farm is a mixed arable 292-ha farm in a partially wooded landscape in Leicestershire. It was managed as a shoot from 1993 to 2002, combining habitat management with predator control (stopped in 2002) and winter grain provision (ceased in 2006). Hope Farm comprises a 181-ha mainly arable farm in an open landscape in Cambridgeshire, where habitat management for farmland birds has taken place since 2002. At both sites, breeding bird abundance has been monitored annually. Information on farm management was translated into three variables measuring annual provision of nesting cover, summer food and winter food. The number of Carrion Crow and Magpie territories was used as an index of predator abundance. Results Avian abundance increased at both farms much faster than within their respective regions. Recovery of priority species was positively correlated with the provision of summer foraging habitats and negatively correlated with the provision of supplementary grain during winter. The latter finding was counterintuitive and may reflect an increase in hedgerow provision that coincided with the cessation of grain provision at both farms. The increase in bird abundance was not sustained at Loddington Farm in the absence of predator control, although it was at Hope Farm where predator densities were markedly lower. Conclusion The data from Hope Farm suggest that where predator densities are relatively low (2 locally, 2 in spring regionally), recovery of farmland birds can be achieved through habitat management alone. Where predator densities are high (>5 corvid pairs/km2 and >1.1 foxes/km2), as at Loddington Farm, species recovery, particularly of open-cup nesting species, may require predator control as well as habitat management. Further study is needed to confirm this tentative conclusion from only two sites.
- Published
- 2016
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25. Indirect effects of pesticides on breeding yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella)
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Richard B. Bradbury, Antony J. Morris, Jeremy D. Wilson, and Mark J. Whittingham
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Ecology ,business.industry ,Intensive farming ,Foraging ,Cumulative effects ,Yellowhammer ,music.producer ,Biology ,Pesticide ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Agriculture ,Seasonal breeder ,Animal Science and Zoology ,music ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Intensification of agriculture is believed to have caused declines in farmland bird populations. One of the key elements of recent agricultural intensification is the increased use of pesticides. However, studies elucidating relationships between individual management practices and responses in bird populations remain rare. Here, evidence is presented of indirect effects of pesticides on behaviour and nestling condition of yellowhammers (Emberiza citrinella L.). Insecticide use was associated with reduced abundance of invertebrate food at the field scale resulting, early in the season (when nestlings were fed exclusively on invertebrates), in a negative correlation with yellowhammer foraging intensity. There was also a negative relationship between insecticide use and nestling body condition. While cumulative effects of repeated spraying can have impacts, the occurrence of any insecticide spraying in the breeding season may be more detrimental than multiple sprays at other times. Minimising applications of persistent broad-spectrum insecticides during March‐June, the provision of alternative unsprayed foraging habitat and advice on mitigating indirect effects of pesticides to advisers and users are likely to benefit nesting yellowhammers. # 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2005
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26. Sustainable Arable Farming For an Improved Environment (SAFFIE): managing winter wheat sward structure for Skylarks Alauda arvensis
- Author
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Barbara Smith, John M. Holland, Naomi E. Jones, and Antony J. Morris
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,Population ,Foraging ,Biodiversity ,Sowing ,Alauda ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy ,Seasonal breeder ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Arable land ,education ,Hectare ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Research has shown a close correlation between the decline of the UK Skylark Alauda arvensis population and the replacement of spring-sown cereals with winter-sown varieties, in which advanced sward development prevents successful multiple nesting attempts and reduces access for foraging. Widescale reversal of sowing times is unlikely for commercial reasons, so research has recently focused on ways of manipulating the sward structure of winter wheat to prolong access to nest-sites and food. An RSPB pilot study investigated leaving small ‘undrilled patches’ in otherwise conventionally managed winter wheat crops. This option was later incorporated into a fully replicated experimental design, as part of the Sustainable Arable Farming For an Improved Environment (SAFFIE) project. This large consortium-led project aims to test solutions for improving biodiversity within winter-cereal-dominated rotations. The experiment described here ran over 2002–3, with three field-scale ‘treatments’ on 15 sites in the first year. The treatments compare (1) conventional winter wheat, (2) winter wheat sown in double-normal width (25 cm) wide-spaced rows (WSR) and (3) winter wheat with two 4-m by 4-m undrilled patches per hectare (UP). Results from the 2002 breeding season showed that undrilled patch treatments supported more breeding Skylarks for longer, most likely by aiding accessibility of food. WSR rows were little used by Skylarks and did not improve the abundance of favoured seed and invertebrate food items over conventional crops. Nesting performance and foraging patterns are discussed with reference to invertebrate food abundance and its accessibility, as determined by sward structure.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. What factors determine where invertebrate-feeding birds forage in dry agricultural grasslands?
- Author
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D.L. Buckingham, Philip W. Atkinson, and Antony J. Morris
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Prunella modularis ,biology.organism_classification ,Grassland ,Grazing pressure ,Sturnus ,Agronomy ,Abundance (ecology) ,Grazing ,Forb ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Trampling ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Increases in the intensity of the management of agricultural grasslands over the past 50 years have reduced plant species diversity in swards and increased uniformity in structure through changes in fertilizer regimes, grazing and mowing practices. These factors, as well as increased disturbance and trampling, have reduced the number and diversity of forbs and thus the diversity and abundance of invertebrates, in particular of foliar species. Associated with these changes in management, there has been a large decline in the abundance of many species of farmland birds in pastoral areas and more local extinctions compared with arable areas. To understand the impact of these management changes on bird populations, and design measures to reverse the declines, it is necessary to identify the key factors influencing bird usage of fields. We review results from five studies, which have related fertilizer and grazing management to bird usage of grass fields. Species that fed on soil invertebrates tended to show a positive response to the amount of nitrogen fertilizer added and increased grazing pressure, although there was a high degree of correlation between these two variables. In summer, many species, including corvids, Common Blackbird Turdus merula, Common Starling Sturnus vulgaris, Pied Wagtail Motacilla alba and Hedge Accentor Prunella modularis, showed a negative relationship with sward height, and in winter more species showed a positive relationship with bare ground. Taller sward heights are associated with a greater abundance and diversity of bird invertebrate food resources, and accessibility of food items or a lower risk of predation (actual or perceived) are likely to be the reasons for birds choosing to forage on shorter swards and in areas with more bare ground. Birds feeding on soil invertebrates were found to be generally tolerant of modern management practices that maintain short swards short, as accessibility to the soil has been increased. Species that feed on foliar invertebrates or forb seeds have been affected negatively by modern grassland agricultural practices.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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28. Evidence for the indirect effects of pesticides on farmland birds
- Author
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J. D. Hart, Antony J. Morris, Peter A. Robertson, Nigel D. Boatman, Kathryn A. Murray, A. W. A. Murray, Nicholas W. Brickle, and T. P. Milsom
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Zoology ,Alauda ,Yellowhammer ,Pesticide ,music.producer ,biology.organism_classification ,Perdix ,Emberiza citrinella ,Food chain ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Corn bunting ,music ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Indirect effects of pesticides, operating through the food chain, have been proposed as a possible causal factor in the decline of farmland bird species. To demonstrate such a link, evidence is needed of (1) an effect of food abundance on breeding performance or survival; (2) an effect of breeding performance or survival on population change; and (3) pesticide effects on food resources, sufficient to reduce breeding performance or survival, and hence to affect the rate of population change. Evidence under all three categories is only available for one species, the Grey Partridge Perdix perdix, although data showing effects of pesticides on food resources and relationships between food resources and breeding performance are also available for some other species. This paper reports on recent work investigating the effects of pesticides on Yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella and Skylark Alauda arvensis during the breeding season. The probability of brood reduction in Yellowhammer was affected by the proportion of the foraging area around the nest which was sprayed with insecticide. No significant effects of pesticides were recorded on Skylark chick condition or growth rate, but sample sizes were small. Invertebrate food abundance affected chick condition (Skylark) and the number of chicks fledging (Yellowhammer and Corn Bunting Miliaria calandra; relationship for the latter derived from re-analysis of data from an earlier study). Other recent work is briefly reviewed and the current evidence for the indirect effects of pesticides is summarized. Significant knowledge gaps are identified and some of the issues involved in resolving these are discussed.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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29. Habitat and weather are weak correlates of nestling condition and growth rates of four UK farmland passerines
- Author
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Richard B. Bradbury, Jeremy D. Wilson, Antony J. Morris, Darren Moorcroft, and Allan J. Perkins
- Subjects
Fringilla ,biology ,Reproductive success ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Alauda ,Yellowhammer ,music.producer ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Brood ,Habitat ,Animal Science and Zoology ,music ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Agricultural intensification is believed to have driven declines of farmland bird populations and the invertebrates and weeds on which they feed. We investigated whether habitat and weather, as surrogates for food availability, influenced nestling growth rates and condition of four farmland passerines (Skylark Alauda arvensis, Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs, Linnet Carduelis cannabina and Yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella). We also tested whether nestling growth rates or condition influenced whether a brood subsequently fledged, starved or was depredated. Linnet nestlings are fed almost exclusively on seeds, and were unaffected by weather. Nestlings of the other species are fed mainly invertebrates and were affected negatively by rain but positively by increasing minimum temperatures and daily hours of sunshine. Condition and growth rates of Linnet nestlings were lower in nests further from oilseed-rape fields, rape seeds being important in the diet of this species. Nestlings of the other three species were unaffected by availability of habitats selected by parents foraging for nestling food. Brood fate was not influenced by growth rates or condition for any species. Most models explained little variation in the response variable. Possible reasons, including the possibility that parents trade off their own survival prospects to ensure reproductive success, are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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30. Use of field margins by foraging yellowhammers Emberiza citrinella
- Author
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Richard B. Bradbury, Allan J. Perkins, Mark J. Whittingham, and Antony J. Morris
- Subjects
Agroecosystem ,Ecology ,biology ,Agroforestry ,Foraging ,Yellowhammer ,music.producer ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Predation ,Geography ,Habitat ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Arable land ,Weed ,music ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Some agri-environment schemes promote the creation and management of a variety of non-crop habitats on farmland in the UK, yet there has been relatively little monitoring to assess how species, particularly birds, use these habitats. The present study deals with a declining UK farmland bird species, yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella , and considers to what extent grass margins of arable fields are used as a foraging habitat when feeding nestlings. Studies were carried out in lowland mixed farmland in southern England. Grass margins and other non-crop field boundary habitats, such as hedgerows and ditches, were selected relative to cropped areas by yellowhammers. No significant difference was found between use of cut and uncut grass margins. Studies have shown that grass margins support high densities of invertebrates and their provision at the edge of arable fields would benefit yellowhammers during the breeding season both as habitat for prey and as nesting habitat. During the breeding season from May to August, management should create cut and uncut grass margins in close proximity to each other. This could be achieved by cutting only the outer edge of the grass margin, maintaining cover next to the hedgerow. Cut areas would provide easier access to food resources for birds and prevent weed encroachment to the crop, whilst adjacent uncut areas would maintain invertebrate sources and provide nesting cover for yellowhammers.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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31. Foraging habitat selection by yellowhammers (Emberiza citrinella) nesting in agriculturally contrasting regions in lowland England
- Author
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D.L. Buckingham, Antonios Kyrkos, Antony J. Morris, A. D. Evans, Jeremy D. Wilson, Richard B. Bradbury, and Mark J. Whittingham
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Emberizidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Population decline ,Geography ,Habitat ,Abundance (ecology) ,Organic farming ,Seasonal breeder ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Fine-scale habitat use by yellowhammers (Emberiza citrinella) searching for food to provision nestlings was compared in three agriculturally contrasting regions of lowland England. Log-linear modelling was used to test for significant overall variation in habitat use and significant differences in relative use between pairs of habitats. Yellowhammers provisioned nestlings non-randomly with respect to habitat availability. Habitat selection was found to be generally consistent across the three regions; field boundary structures and barley crops were the most selected foraging habitats, while intensively-managed grass fields were avoided relative to virtually all other habitats. The observed patterns of habitat selection are likely to result from an interaction of food abundance and varying accessibility to food, mediated by sward structure. The geographical generality of the results allows reasons to be suggested for the recent rapid population decline of the species and general conservation recommendations to be made with respect to lowland farmland.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Habitat characteristics affecting use of lowland agricultural grassland by birds in winter
- Author
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Jeremy D. Wilson, Allan J. Perkins, Mark J. Whittingham, Antony J. Morris, Richard B. Bradbury, and Philip R. Barnett
- Subjects
geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Species diversity ,Alauda ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Pasture ,Grassland ,Geography ,Habitat ,Grazing ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Wildlife conservation - Abstract
Almost a third of the bird species designated as Species of European Conservation Concern exploit agricultural grasslands, yet few studies have focused on their use as foraging habitats for birds. This study investigated the influence of variation in sward structure, grassland management and landscape variables on the use of 77 grass fields by 14 field-feeding bird species wintering on lowland mixed farmland in southern England. Multiple logistic regression was used to model the proportion of bird-count visits in which each species was encountered as a function of the recorded habitat variables for each field. Variation in sward height and density were associated with frequency of occurrence for 12 bird species and larger areas of bare earth and occurrence of winter grazing by stock animals were correlated with greater frequency of occurrence by 11 bird species. Two rapidly declining species, skylark (Alauda arvensis) and yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella), were recorded more frequently on fields with higher numbers of seeding grasses. We suggest that mosaics of fields managed as short-term leys and permanent pastures with low-intensity cattle grazing over the autumn and winter would provide the combination of heterogeneous sward structure, areas of bare earth and presence of some seeding plants necessary to maximise the range of bird species able to use a given area of agriculturally improved grassland throughout the winter.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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33. Habitat associations and breeding success of yellowhammers on lowland farmland
- Author
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Richard B. Bradbury, Stéphanie C. Clark, Allan J. Perkins, Antony J. Morris, Jeremy D. Wilson, and Antonios Kyrkos
- Subjects
Avian clutch size ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,Population ,Yellowhammer ,music.producer ,Population decline ,Geography ,Nest ,Habitat ,Agricultural land ,music ,education ,Wildlife conservation - Abstract
1. Yellowhammers began to decline on British lowland farmland in the late 1980s and losses are presently 10% per year. This study examined variation in the habitat selection and breeding success of yellowhammers, allowing an evaluation of whether Britain's yellowhammer decline might have been caused by recent changes in agriculture. 2. Yellowhammer territories were associated with hedgerows, vegetated ditches and wide uncultivated grassy margins around fields. Pasture and silage leys were avoided. Nests were built among herbaceous vegetation in ditches or in the shrubby vegetation of hedgerows. 3. Breeding started slightly earlier on organic farms than on intensively managed farms, but no measure of breeding success differed between farm types. Predation was the cause of most (64%) nest failures. A maximum of three breeding attempts (two successful) was observed per pair, with a mean clutch size of 3·3, a Mayfield nest success rate of 0·46, and 2·6 nestlings fledged per successful brood. These data, together with published estimates of adult yellowhammer survival and of post-fledging survival among other passerines, suggest that breeding productivity is too low to maintain a stable population. 4. The removal of hedgerows or abandonment of hedge management, filling or clearing of ditches, intensification of grassland management and cropping or grazing right up to the field edge, are all likely to have adversely affected yellowhammers on lowland farmland in southern England. Policy reforms that redirect subsidy support to environmentally beneficial management of field margin habitats and retention of winter-feeding sites such as stubbles should assist in restoring populations of breeding yellowhammers on lowland farmland. 5. Our data expand further the array of farmland bird species for which interactions between agricultural change and population change are increasingly understood.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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34. Use of set-aside land in winter by declining farmland bird species in the UK
- Author
-
A. D. Evans, D.L. Buckingham, Antony J. Morris, C.J. Orsman, and R. Yaxley
- Subjects
biology ,Agroforestry ,Ecology ,biology.organism_classification ,Emberiza citrinella ,Habitat ,Set-aside ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,Arable land ,Common Agricultural Policy ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common - Abstract
Between 1992 and 1993 over 600 000 ha of arable farmland in the UK were set aside under a production control mechanism of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) of the European Union. One of the management options for this set-aside land was to leave it as an over-winter fallow with a naturally regenerated green cover. This study was designed to test whether such land was used by seed-eating bird species, populations of many of which have undergone recent severe declines. Five out of six declining species recorded in the study were found in significantly greater numbers on this habitat than would be expected if the birds were randomly distributed over the farmland landscape. The results of this study, covering a wide geographical area, reinforce previous findings of the importance of winter food sources, particularly over-winter stubble fields, to declining farmland seed-eaters. Proposed changes to the CAP under Agenda 2000 include the reduction of the obligatory set-aside rate to zero. These results sugges...
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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35. Twenty years of local farmland bird conservation: the effects of management on avian abundance at two UK demonstration sites
- Author
-
Nicholas J. Aebischer, Chris M. Bailey, David W. Gibbons, Antony J. Morris, Will J. Peach, Chris Stoate, Nicholas J. Aebischer, Chris M. Bailey, David W. Gibbons, Antony J. Morris, Will J. Peach, and Chris Stoate
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Trichomonad parasite infection in four species of Columbidae in the UK
- Author
-
Antony J. Morris, Jennifer E. Stockdale, Simon J. Goodman, Keith C. Hamer, Rosie J. Lennon, and Jenny C. Dunn
- Subjects
Trichomonas ,C111 Parasitology ,Trichomonas Infections ,Zoology ,Trichomonas Infection ,C170 Population Biology ,Trichomonas gallinae ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,food ,Species Specificity ,DNA, Ribosomal Spacer ,medicine ,Animals ,Columbidae ,Phylogeny ,Epizootic ,DNA Primers ,Columba oenas ,biology ,Bird Diseases ,Incidence ,Streptopelia ,Genetic Variation ,Trichomonas tenax ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,DNA, Protozoan ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Streptopelia turtur ,food.food ,Infectious Diseases ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology ,C180 Ecology - Abstract
SUMMARYTrichomonas gallinaeis an emerging pathogen in wild birds, linked to recent declines in finch (Fringillidae) populations across Europe. Globally, the main hosts for this parasite are species of Columbidae (doves and pigeons); here we carry out the first investigation into the presence and incidence ofTrichomonasin four species of Columbidae in the UK, through live sampling of wild-caught birds and subsequent PCR. We report the first known UK cases ofTrichomonasinfection in 86% of European Turtle DovesStreptopelia turtursampled, along with 86% of Eurasian Collared DovesStreptopelia decaocto, 47% of WoodpigeonsColumba palumbusand 40% of Stock DovesColumba oenas. Birds were more likely to be infected if the farm provided supplementary food for gamebirds. We found three strains ofT. gallinaeand one strain clustering within theTrichomonas tenaxclade, not previously associated with avian hosts in the UK. OneT. gallinaestrain was identical at the ITS/5.8S/ITS2 ribosomal region to that responsible for the finch trichomonosis epizootic. We highlight the importance of increasing our knowledge of the diversity and ecological implications ofTrichomonasparasites in order further to understand the sub-clinical impacts of parasite infection.
- Published
- 2013
37. The status and distribution of NightjarsCaprimulgus europaeusin Britain in 1992. A report to the British Trust for Ornithology
- Author
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A. D. Evans, Ken W. Smith, D. J. Burges, Robert J. Fuller, and Antony J. Morris
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Population ,Distribution (economics) ,biology.organism_classification ,Geography ,Long period ,Caprimulgus europaeus ,Ornithology ,education ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Demography - Abstract
In 1992 the British Trust for Ornithology and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds organized a national survey of Nightjars. A total of 3093 churring males was located and the British population was estimated to be approximately 3400 males. This represents an increase in numbers of more than 50% since the last national survey in 1981. Possible reasons for this partial recovery after a long period of decline are discussed.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Setting aside farmland in Europe: The wider context
- Author
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András Báldi, Jenna Hegarty, Trees Robijns, and Antony J. Morris
- Subjects
Ecology ,Aside ,business.industry ,Political science ,Environmental resource management ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Context (language use) ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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