Search published articles



Devvratsinh Mori, Raju Vyas, Gourav Dadhich,
Volume 6, Issue 2 (6-2024)
Abstract

The Merlin Falco columbarius, is a small falcon widely distributed across Europe, Asia, and North America. Merlin falcons are winter visitors to north India. They occur from an arid area in Gujarat to far northeast Arunachal Pradesh. Here, we present details of the Merlin's diet on winter foraging grounds in Gujarat and Rajasthan, Western India, based on a combination of direct observations from 2009 to 2023 and secondary data extracted from various social media platforms. A total of 99 hunting events of Merlin with their prey bird were collected from the study areas, including 39 generated from direct observation of falcon hunting and 60 images of falcons with prey items acquired from various electronic media. The higher number (72) of falcon hunting events were noted from Gujarat, while a lower number (27) of observations were noted from Rajasthan. Of the total of 99 hunting events, 83 were carried out by males, 11 by females, and 5 juvenile falcons observed hunting. The hunting times of the falcons were noted in the morning (67%), in the evening (28%), and the least (5%) were recorded in midday periods. Merlins hunted and consumed 17 different types of smaller birds belonging to seven families; the highest number (45.45%) of prey items were the Greater Short-toed Lark, Calandrella brachydactyla, from Family Alaudidae and the second highest prey species (7%) was the Barn Swallow, Hirundo rustica, Family Hirundinidae. Most of the prey birds were larks of different species (70.70%), with the remaining prey birds in very low numbers. However, the present study supports an earlier study stating that a higher portion of smaller migratory birds are in the diets of Merlin falcons.

Lina Chatterjee, Abhik Rong, C. S. Samrat, Saswati Sinha, Tarak Samanta, Arjan Basu Roy,
Volume 6, Issue 4 (9-2024)
Abstract

This study aims to investigate the feeding behaviour and diving habits of the Little Cormorant (Microcarbo niger) in the vicinity of Pakhibitan, which is a component of Ecopark, the largest urban park located in Newtown, Kolkata, West Bengal, India. The study took place for three days a week starting from September 2021 to February 2022. The Little Cormorant mostly used the Lake as a foraging location in Pakhibitan, with the highest number of dives (1957 dives, 10.78 ± 10.43 sec) and surface pauses (1980 surface pauses, 6.02 ± 5.48 sec) compared to a nearby smaller pond. The pattern of dive bout/surface pause showed considerable variability between lake (F = 1.055, df = 1, P > 0.05) and pond (F = 0.153, df = 1, P > 0.05). There may be a correlation between the average duration of dives and the average recovery time between dives, and the depth of the water bodies. In certain cases, longer dives were associated with longer rest periods, resulting in increased time spent searching for prey. Consequently, the foraging efficiency of the dives may decrease as the diving depth increases. The feeding behaviour of the Little Cormorant is subject to the influence of various environmental conditions, necessitating a more comprehensive investigation.

Emin Bozkurt, Arda Emre Kandil,
Volume 7, Issue 1 (3-2025)
Abstract

Global climate change affects the physical, morphological, and behavioral characteristics of reptiles. Sometimes reptiles may undergo spatial changes to cope with global climate change. Under the influence of global climate change, reptiles show many different responses, including habitat shifting, range expansion, habitat loss, or extinction. In this study, 117 locality records of Montivipera xanthina were used in conjunction with the program MaxEnt within the context of current (1981–2010) and five different future (2071–2100) climate change predictions (GFDL-ESM4, IPSL-CM6A-LR, MPI-ESM1-2-HR, MRI-ESM2-0, and UKESM1-0-LL) in two shared socioeconomic pathways (ssp126 and ssp585). Further, habitat probability analysis was conducted for all predictions. The gain-loss analysis suggests that M. xanthina will lose 28.90% and 59.89% of the current distribution range under ssp126 and ssp 585 scenarios, respectively. The Bosphorus, Taurus Mountains in the Mediterranean region, Marmara region, and the Peloponnese were recovered as suitable areas of occupation in all future scenarios.


Page 3 from 3     

  | Journal of Animal Diversity

Designed & Developed by : Yektaweb