Title Gulbių nebylių (Cygnus olor) sankaupų gausa, formavimosi ir pasiskirstymo ypatumai Lietuvos žuvininkystės ūkiuose /
Translation of Title Abudance of mute swan (cygnus olor) flocks in the fishponds complexes of lithuania, characteristics of formation and distribution.
Authors Mikalauskienė, Agnė
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Pages 46
Abstract [eng] In 2009, research was carried out on abundance of mute swan flocks, its formation, seasonal dynamics and distribution characteristics in nineteen (with branches in twenty-one) fish farms in Lithuania. This research fills-in a number of gaps of previous studies on mute swan flocks formation in fish farm ponds. Around three thousand non breeding mute swans are using fish farming ponds during flock’s formation season. Birds stay here during seasonal migrations. Also non breeding swans gather here to moult. The duration of stay of swans in fish farm ponds is determined by the time of filling up (in April) and draining (most intensive in the second half of September and in the first half of October) of ponds. The most numerous flocks are at late spring - early summer, particularly in June, but the size of individual flocks vary considerably and may reach peak during other periods of the season, especially in autumn. The most stable factor determining size of the specific flock in fish farm ponds is area of the pond where fish are fed. Flocks are more numerous in farms (or groups of farms) in which value of this factor is higher and vice versa. However, random natural dwellings of mute swan flocks with large populations (for example neighborhood of Kuršių Marios – geographical factor) may outweigh the above factor’s impact on mute swans flock size in fish ponds. Flocks of mute swans cluster during the mobilization period and use most part of the fish farm pond (usually 50-70%) – big part in comparison with natural ponds. In most cases swans gather in farm ponds of two – three year carps, because fish of this age group are fed with mixed fodder and cereal grains. During our study in seven (39%) out of eighteen farms, flocks of mute swan in spring were smaller than ten years ago. However this trend is not statistically reliable, whereas increase in autumn flocks is statistically reliable (in several fish farms 71 %). This trend can be related to economical recovery of fish farms (reactivated fish feeding).
Type Master thesis
Language Lithuanian
Publication date 2014