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Great bustard

The great bustard (Otis tarda) is a bird in the bustard family, and it is the only living member of the genus Otis.[2] It breeds in open grasslands and farmland from northern Morocco, South and Central Europe, to temperate Central and East Asia. European populations are mainly resident, but Asian populations migrate farther south in winter. It has been listed as a Vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List since 1996.[1]

Great bustard
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[1]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Otidiformes
Family: Otididae
Genus: Otis
Species:
O. tarda
Binomial name
Otis tarda
Range of Otis tarda
  Breeding
  Resident
  Passage
  Non-breeding

Portugal and Spain now have about 60% of the world's population.[3] It was driven to extinction in Great Britain, when the last bird was shot in 1832. Since 1998 The Great Bustard Group have helped reintroduce it into England,[4] on Salisbury Plain, a British Army training area. Here, the lack of public access and disturbance allows them the seclusion they (and other animals) desire, especially as a large, ground-nesting bird.

Taxonomy edit

The genus Otis was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae;[5] it came from the Greek name ὠτίς ōtis[6] used for this species[7] taken from Natural History by Pliny the Elder published around 77 AD which briefly mentions a bird like it, it was also given the name ωτιδος ōtidos and the Latin aves tardas[a] mentioned by the Pierre Belon in 1555 and Ulisse Aldrovandi in 1600.[9][10]

The specific epithet tarda comes from the Latin word tardus for "slow" and "deliberate",[11] which is apt to describe the typical walking style of the species.[12] The Latin phrase avis tarda "slow bird" is where the word bustard comes from borrowing Old French bistarda.[13][14]

 
A museum display shows male-female sexual dimorphism.

Description edit

 
Captive male great bustard, showing the characteristic long, beard-like feathers and heavy build

The adult male great bustard is amongst the heaviest living flying animals. A male is typically 90–105 cm (2 ft 11 in – 3 ft 5 in) tall, with a length of around 115 cm (3 ft 9 in) and has a 2.1–2.7 m (6 ft 11 in – 8 ft 10 in) wingspan. The male can range in weight from 5.8 to 18 kg (13 to 40 lb).[3][15] The heaviest verified specimen, collected in Manchuria, was about 21 kg (46 lb),[15][16] a world record for heaviest flying bird.[17] In a study in Spain, one male weighed as much as 19 kg (42 lb).[18] Larger specimens have been reported but remain unverified. Average male weights as reported have been fairly variable: in Russia, males weighed a median of 9.2 kg (20 lb); in Spain, males weighed a mean of 11.62 kg (25.6 lb) during breeding season and 9.65 kg (21.3 lb) during non-breeding; in Germany, males weighed a mean of 11.97 kg (26.4 lb); and the Guinness World Records has indicated that male bustards in Great Britain weighed an average of 13.5 kg (30 lb). Average weight of males is almost an exact match to that of male Kori bustards. Among all flying animals and land birds, male Andean condors (Vultur gryphus) may match or exceed the mean body masses of these male bustards but not their maximum weights. Furthermore, male swans of the two largest species (trumpeter and mute) may attain a similar average mass depending on season and region.[19][18][20][15][21][22] Among both bustards and all living birds, the upper reported mass of this species is rivaled by that of the kori bustard (Ardeotis kori), which, due to its relatively longer tarsi and tail, is both longer and taller on average and is less sexually dimorphic.[18] In terms of weight ranges reported, the great Indian bustard (Ardeotis nigriceps) also only lags slightly behind these species.[19][20][15]

 
Close up of face.

The great bustard is also arguably the most sexual dimorphic extant bird species, in terms of the size difference between males and females. Adult male great bustards measured in Spain weighed on average 2.48 times more than females.[23] Going on mass, the only known bird with a higher dimorphism is the green peafowl (Pavo muticus) as the males are apparently near four times as heavy as females.[19][16] The female is about a third smaller in linear dimensions, typically measuring 75 to 85 cm (2 ft 6 in to 2 ft 9 in) in height, about 90 cm (2 ft 11 in)[22] in length and 180 cm (5 ft 11 in) across the wings.[3][21] Overall, the female's weight can range from 3.1 to 8 kg (6.8 to 17.6 lb).[21] Like male weights, females weights are quite variable as reported: in Germany, females had a mean weight of 3.82 kg (8.4 lb), in Spain, females had a mean weight of 4.35 kg (9.6 lb) and in Russia, females reportedly had a median weight of 6 kg (13 lb). The latter figure indicates that eastern birds (presumably O. t. dybowskii) are considerably less sexually dimorphic in body mass than in other populations.[19][18][20] Perhaps because of this physical sexual dimorphism, there is a skewed sex ratio of about 1.5:1 female to male.

 
Mounted specimen of a female, with somewhat more muted tones and a more slender, smaller build than the adult male

An adult male is brown above, barred with blackish colouration, and white below, with a long grey neck and head. His breast and lower neck sides are chestnut and there is a golden wash to the back and the extent of these bright colours tending to increase as the male ages. In the breeding season, the male has long white neck bristles, which measure up to 12–15 cm (4.7–5.9 in) in length, continually growing from the third to the sixth year of life.[3] In flight, the long wings are predominantly white with brown showing along the edges of the lower primary and secondary feathers and a dark brown streak along the upper-edge of the wing. The breast and neck of the female are buff, with brown and pale colouration over the rest of the plumage rendering it well camouflaged in open habitats. Immature birds resemble the female. The eastern subspecies (O. t. dybowskii) is more extensively grey in colour in both sexes, with more extensive barring on the back.[3] The great bustard has long legs, a long neck and a heavy, barrel-chested body. It is fairly typical of the family in its overall shape and habitat preferences. Three other bustard species overlap in range with this species: the Macqueen's (Chlamydotis macqueenii), houbara (Chlamydotis undulata) and little bustards (Tetrax tetrax). However, none of these attains the plumage coloration nor approach the body sizes of this species. Thus, the great bustard is essentially unmistakable.

Habitat edit

 
Great bustards in Spain in fairly typical habitat for the species.

These birds' habitat is grassland or steppe defined by open, flat or somewhat rolling landscapes. They can be found on undisturbed cultivation and seem to prefer areas with wild or cultivated crops such as cereals, vineyards and fodder plants. However, during the breeding season, they actively avoid areas with regular human activity and can be disturbed by agricultural practices. Great bustards are often attracted to areas with considerable insect activity.

The breeding range of the great bustard currently stretches from Portugal to Manchuria, though previously the species bred even further east in Russian Primorsky Krai. Due to population declines across much of the range, more than half of the global population is now found in central Spain with around 30,000 individuals. Smaller populations are in southern Russia and the Great Hungarian Plain.[24]

 
Adult male great bustard in habitat.

Behaviour edit

The species is gregarious, especially in winter when gatherings of several dozen birds may occur. Male and female groups do not mix outside of the breeding season. The great bustard has a stately slow walk but tends to run when disturbed rather than fly. Running speeds have not been measured but adult females have been known to outrun red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), which can reach a trotting speed of 48 km/h (30 mph).[25][26][3] Both sexes are usually silent but can engage in deep grunts when alarmed or angered. The displaying adult male may produce some booming, grunting and raucous noises. The female may utter some guttural calls at the nest and brooded young make a soft, trilling call in communication with their mothers.

Migration edit

Some individuals in Iberian populations make short seasonal movements of 5 – 200 km, particularly males which appear to move in response to higher summer temperatures.[27][28] European populations are sedentary or make irregular movements in response to severe winter weather.[29][30] Populations breeding along the Volga River in Russia migrate 1000 km to overwinter in Crimea and Kherson Oblast.[31] Populations breeding in northern Mongolia migrate over 2000 km to overwinter in Shaanxi Province of China.[32] In migratory populations, great bustards often gather in larger numbers at pre-migratory sites in order to move collectively to winter grounds. In the Iberian Peninsula, bustards that engage in migration seem to choose different periods for movements based on sex.[33][34][35][36][37] No population is known to use the same grounds for wintering and summering.[38] Great Bustards are strong fliers and reach speeds of 48 km/h (30 mph) to 98 km/h (60 miles/hr)during migration.[32]

 
A great bustard in flight.

Reproduction edit

 
Male Bustard display
 
Eggs, Collection Museum Wiesbaden

The great bustard breeds in March, and a single male may mate with up to five females. Before mating, the males moult into their breeding plumage around January. Males establish dominance in their groups during winter, clashing violently by ramming into and hitting each other with their bills.[3] Like other bustards, the male great bustard displays and competes for the attention of females on what is known as a lek. In this species, the male has a flamboyant display beginning with the strutting male puffing up his throat to the size of a football. He then tilts forwards and pulls his head in so that the long whiskery chin feathers point upwards and the head is no longer visible. He next cocks his tail flat along his back, exposing the normally hidden bright white plumage then he lowers his wings, with the primary flight feathers folded but with the white secondaries fanning out.[39] The displaying males, who may walk around for several minutes at a time with feathers flared and head buried waiting for hens to arrive, have been described as a "foam-bath" because of their appearance.[18] All breeding great bustards also moult again from June to September.

One to three olive or tan coloured, glossy eggs (two eggs being the average) are laid by the female in May or June. The nests, which are shallow scrapes made by the female on dry, soft slopes and plains, are usually situated close to the prior lek location. Nests are situated in sparse clusters, with a study in Inner Mongolia finding nests at a minimal 9 m (30 ft) apart from each other. In the same study, nests were placed at mid-elevation on a hill, at about 190 to 230 m (620 to 750 ft). Nesting sites are typically in dense grassy vegetation about 15 to 35 cm (5.9 to 13.8 in), likely for protection against predation, with extensive exposure to sunlight.[40] Eggs weigh about 150 g (5.3 oz) and are on average 79.4 mm (3.13 in) tall by 56.8 mm (2.24 in) wide. The female incubates the eggs alone for 21 to 28 days. The chicks almost immediately leave the nest after they hatch, although they do not move very far from their mother until they are at least 1 year old. Young great bustards begin developing their adult plumage at about 2 months, and begin to develop flying skills at the same time. They practice by stretching, running, flapping, and making small hops and jumps to get airborne. By three months they are able to fly reasonable distances. If threatened, the young stand still, using their downy plumage, mainly sepia in colour with paler buffy streaks, as camouflage. Juveniles are independent by their first winter, but normally stay with their mother until the next breeding season. Males usually start to mate from 5 to 6 years of age, although may engage in breeding display behaviour at a younger age. Females usually first breed at 2 to 3 years old.[3][39]

Diet edit

The species is omnivorous, taking different foods in differing seasons. In northwestern Spain in August, 48.4% of the diet of adult birds was green plant material, 40.9% was invertebrates and 10.6% was seeds. In the same population during winter, seeds and green plant material constituted almost the entirety of the diet. Alfalfa is seemingly preferred in the diet of birds from Spain.[41] Other favoured plant life in the diet can include legumes, crucifers, common dandelion and grapes and the dry seeds of wheat and barley.[3] Among animal prey, insects are generally eaten and are the main food for young bustards in their first summer, though they then switch to the seasonal herbivorous preferences of adults by winter. Coleoptera (including beetles), Hymenoptera (including bees, wasps and ants) and Orthoptera (including crickets, grasshoppers and locusts) are mainly taken, largely based on availability and abundance. Small vertebrates, including small rodents, frogs, lizards and chicks of other birds, may supplement the diet when the opportunity arises.[3][42] Great bustards may eat toxic blister beetles of the genus Meloe to self-medicate (Zoopharmacognosy)[43] increasing sexual arousal of males.[44] Some plants selected in the mating season showed in-vitro activity against laboratory models of parasites and pathogens.[45]

Foraging edit

In winter the feeding intensity increased and then decreased through the morning in both sexes, and was lower in flocks of males than in flocks of females. This sexual difference is greater where legume availability was smaller in central Spain.[46] Males that foraged slightly less intensively than females could compensate with longer periods of foraging [47] and bigger bite size[48] that would allow them to obtain enough food relative to their absolute daily energy requirements. The size of morning foraging area is smaller in sites with more legume availability, likely because legumes are the most preferred substrate type.[46]

Mortality edit

Great bustards typically live for around 10 years, but some have been known to live up to 15 years or more. The maximum known life span for the species was 28 years. Adult males seem to have a higher mortality rate than females due mainly to fierce intraspecies fighting with other males during the breeding season. Many males may perish in their first couple of years of maturity due to this cause.[21]

Although little detailed information has been obtained of predators, over 80% of great bustards die in the first year of life and many are victims of predation. Chicks are subject to predation by the fact that they are ground-dwelling birds which are reluctant to fly. Predators of eggs and hatchlings include raptors, corvids, hedgehogs, foxes, weasels, badgers (Meles ssp.), martens (Martes ssp.), rats (Rattus ssp.) and wild boars (Sus scrofa). The most serious natural predators of nests are perhaps red foxes and hooded crows (Corvus cornix).[49] Chicks grow very quickly, by 6 months being nearly two-thirds of their adult size, and are predated by foxes, lynxes, wolves (Canis lupus), dogs, jackals and eagles.[50] Predation on adult male great bustards has been reportedly committed by white-tailed eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla) while golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) are potential predators and eastern imperial eagles (Aquila heliaca) have been known to prey on great bustards (but not likely to include adult males).[51][52][53] Great bustards of unspecified age and sex have been found amongst Eurasian eagle-owl (Bubo bubo) prey remains in Bulgaria.[54] A possible act of predation on a great bustard was observed to be committed by a much smaller raptor, the western marsh harrier (Circus aeruginosus), though it was likely that this bustard was "weak or injured" if it was taken alive.[55] The bold, conspicuous behaviour of the breeding adult male bustard may attract the same large mammalian predators that predate chicks, such as wolves and lynx, while the more inconspicuous female may sometimes be attacked by various predators. However, predation is generally fairly rare for adults due to their size, nimbleness and safety in numbers due to their social behaviour.[3][21][56][57]

Occasionally, other natural causes may contribute to mortality in the species, especially starvation in harsh winter months.[56] However, major causes of mortality in recent centuries have been largely linked to human activity, as described below.

Population distribution edit

 
Bustard juvenile

As of 2008, the global population numbered between 44,000 and 51,000 birds (Palacin & Alonso 2008), about 38,000 to 47,000 in Europe, with 30,000 or more than half in Spain. Hungary had the next largest Great Bustard population with about 1,555 in the year 2012, followed by Ukraine and Austria. Between 4,200 and 4,500 were found in east Asia.[24] In recent times, there have been steep declines throughout eastern and central Europe and in Asia, particularly in Kazakhstan and Mongolia.[citation needed]

Sizeable populations exist in Spain (23,055 birds), Russia (8,000 birds), Turkey (800–3,000 birds), Portugal (1,435 birds) and Mongolia (1,000 birds). In Germany and Austria the populations are small (Germany 2016: 232 birds; Austria 2012: 335 birds) but steadily growing for about two decades.[58][59] Elsewhere, the populations are declining due to habitat loss throughout its range. A sizeable population also exists in Hungary (1,100–1,300 birds) where the Eastern European steppe zone ends, near Dévaványa town and also in the Hortobágy National Park, Nagykunság and Nagy-Sárrét regions. The population is down from a population of 10,000–12,000 before the Second World War.

Agrienvironment schemes as unirrigated legumes fostered a population increase of great bustards in Castilla y Leon, central Spain.[60]

Threats and conservation status edit

 
Adult great bustards.

The great bustard is classified as vulnerable at the species level. There are myriad threats faced by great bustards. Increasing human disturbance could lead to habitat loss caused by the ploughing of grasslands, intensive agriculture, afforestation, increased development of irrigation schemes, and the construction of roads, power lines, fencing and ditches. Mechanisation, chemical fertilizers and pesticides, fire and predation by dogs are serious threats for chicks and juveniles, and hunting of adults contributes to high mortality in some of their range countries. Agricultural activity is a major disturbance at nest and, in Hungary, few successful nests are found outside of protected areas.[56]

Bustards, despite their large size, are able to fly at high speed and are often mutilated or killed by overhead electricity cables, which are placed in the West Pannonia region of Eastern Austria and Western Hungary just at their flying height. The electricity companies affected have buried part of the dangerous cables, and have marked remaining aerial parts with fluorescent markers to warn off the birds. These measures have rapidly reduced bustard mortality.[56][61] Bustards are also occasionally killed by collisions with automobiles or by entanglement in wires.[56]

 
Wood engraving by Thomas Bewick in his A History of British Birds, 1797; he was concerned about their probable local extinction. A horseman and greyhound gallop after another bustard in the background.

The great bustard was formerly native in Great Britain and a bustard forms part of the design of the Wiltshire Coat of Arms and as supporters for the Cambridgeshire arms.[62] As early as 1797, the naturalist and wood engraver Thomas Bewick commented in his A History of British Birds that "Both this [the little bustard] and the Great Bustard are excellent eating, and would well repay the trouble of domestication; indeed, it seems surprising, that we should suffer these fine birds to be in danger of total extinction, although, if properly cultivated, they might afford as excellent a repast as our own domestic poultry, or even as the Turkey, for which we are indebted to distant countries."[63] Bewick's prediction was correct; the great bustard was hunted out of existence in Britain by the 1840s.

In 2004, a project overseeing the reintroduction to Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire using eggs taken from Saratov in Russia was undertaken by The Great Bustard Group,[64] a UK Registered Charity that aims to establish a self-sustaining population of great bustards in the UK. The reintroduced birds have laid eggs and raised chicks in Britain in 2009 and 2010. Although the great bustard was once native to Britain, great bustards are considered an alien species under English law.[65] The reintroduction of the great bustard to the UK by the Great Bustard Group is being carried out in parallel with researchers from the University of Bath who are providing insight into the habitat of native great bustard populations in Russia and Hungary. On January 19, 2011, it was announced that the Great Bustard Project had been awarded EU LIFE+ funding, reportedly to the tune of £1.8 million.[66] By 2020 the population in Wiltshire exceeded 100 birds.[67] In Hungary, where the species is the national bird, great bustards are actively protected. The Hungarian authorities are seeking to preserve the long-term future of the population by active protection measures; the area affected by the special ecological treatment had grown to 15 km2 (5.8 sq mi) by the summer of 2006.[disputed ]

Under the auspices of the Convention on Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), also known as the Bonn Convention, the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on the Conservation and Management of Middle-European Populations of the Great Bustard was concluded and came into effect on June 1, 2001. The MoU provides a framework for governments, scientists, conservation bodies and others to monitor and coordinate conservation efforts in order to protect the middle-European populations of the great bustard.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "proximae iis sunt quas Hispania aves tardas appellat, Graecia ωτιδος damnatas in cibis; emissa enim ossibus medulla odoris taedium extemplo sequitur." [Next to these are the birds that Spain calls tardae and Greece otides, which are condemned as an article of diet, because when the marrow is drained out of their bones a disgusting smell at once follows.][8]

References edit

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  36. ^ Palacín, Carlos; Alonso, Juan C.; Alonso, Javier A.; Martín, Carlos A.; Magaña, Marina; Martin, Beatriz (2009). "Differential Migration by Sex in the Great Bustard: Possible Consequences of an Extreme Sexual Size Dimorphism". Ethology. 115 (7): 617–626. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.2009.01647.x. ISSN 0179-1613.
  37. ^ Palacín, Carlos; Alonso, Juan C.; Alonso, Javier A.; Magaña, Marina; Martín, Carlos A. (2011). "Cultural transmission and flexibility of partial migration patterns in a long-lived bird, the great bustard Otis tarda". Journal of Avian Biology. 42 (4): 301–308. doi:10.1111/j.1600-048X.2011.05395.x. ISSN 0908-8857. S2CID 73664186.
  38. ^ "Species factsheet: Otis tarda". Birdlife.org. BirdLife International. 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  39. ^ a b "Otis tarda (great bustard)". Nhm.ac.uk. London: Natural History Museum. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  40. ^ Wan, D; Gao, W.; Zhao, J.; Wang, H.; Cheng, J. (2002). "On nest-site selection of Otic [sic] tarda". Ying yong sheng tai xue bao [The journal of applied ecology / Zhongguo sheng tai xue xue hui, Zhongguo ke xue yuan Shenyang ying yong sheng tai yan jiu suo zhu ban]. 13 (11): 1445–1448. PMID 12625004.
  41. ^ Lane, S.J.; Alonso, J.C.; Alonso, J.A.; Naveso, M.A. (1999). "Seasonal changes in diet and diet selection of great bustards (Otis t. tarda) in north-west Spain". Journal of Zoology. 247 (2): 201–214. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1999.tb00984.x.
  42. ^ Bravo, Carolina; Ponce, Carlos; Palacín, Carlos; Carlos Alonso, Juan (2012). "Diet of young Great Bustards Otis tarda in Spain: Sexual and seasonal differences". Bird Study. 59 (2): 243–251. doi:10.1080/00063657.2012.662940. S2CID 85874066.
  43. ^ Bravo, C.; Bautista, L.M.; García-París, M.; Blanco, G.; Alonso, J.C. (2014). "Males of a Strongly Polygynous Species Consume More Poisonous Food than Females". PLOS ONE. 9 (10): e111057. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...9k1057B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0111057. PMC 4206510. PMID 25337911.
  44. ^ Heneberg, P. (2016). "On Otis tarda and Marquis de Sade: what motivates male Great Bustards to consume Blister Beetles (Meloidae)?". Journal of Ornithology. 57 (4): 1123–1125. doi:10.1007/s10336-016-1369-8. S2CID 17325635.
  45. ^ Bautista, L.M.; Bolivar, P.; Gómez-Muñoz, M. T.; Martínez-Díaz, R. A.; Andrés, M. F.; Alonso, J. C.; Bravo, C.; González-Coloma, A. (2022). "Bioactivity of plants eaten by wild birds against laboratory models of parasites and pathogens" (PDF). Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 10: 1027201. doi:10.3389/fevo.2022.1027201.
  46. ^ a b Bautista, L.M.; Bravo, C.; Ponce, C.; Unzúe, D.; Alonso, J. C. (2017). "Food availability but not sex determines morning foraging area size in the Great Bustard Otis tarda, the most sexually size-dimorphic bird species". Ardeola. 64 (2): 289–303. doi:10.13157/arla.64.2.2017.ra1. hdl:10261/145769. S2CID 91068606.
  47. ^ Martínez, C. (2000). "Daily activity patterns of Great Bustards Otis tarda'" (PDF). Ardeola. 47 (1): 57–68.
  48. ^ Alonso, J. C.; Magaña, M.; Alonso, J. A.; Palacín, C.; Martín, C.; Martín, B. (2009). "The most extreme sexual size dimorphism among birds: allometry, selection, and early juvenile development in the great bustard (Otis tarda)". Auk. 126 (3): 657–665. doi:10.1525/auk.2009.08233. hdl:10261/76983. S2CID 51741160.
  49. ^ "Threats". Grosstrappe.at.
  50. ^ Abdulkarimi, R.; Abbasnejad, H.; Ahmadi, M. (2010). "A Note on the Breeding of the Great Bustard Otis tarda on Sootav Plain, Boukan, Northwestern Iran". Podoces. 5 (2): 104–106.
  51. ^ Love, J.A. (1983). The return of the Sea Eagle. Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0 521 25513 9.
  52. ^ Sastre, P., Ponce, C., Palacín, C., Martín, C. A., & Alonso, J. C. (2009). Disturbances to great bustards (Otis tarda) in central Spain: human activities, bird responses and management implications. European Journal of Wildlife Research, 55(4), 425-432.
  53. ^ Horváth, M., Solti, B., Fatér, I., Juhász, T., Haraszthy, L., Szitta, T., Bállok, Z. & Pásztory-Kovács, S. (2018). Temporal changes in the diet composition of the Eastern Imperial Eagle (Aquila heliaca) in Hungary. Ornis Hungarica, 26(1), 1-26.
  54. ^ Mitev, I.; Boev, Z. (2006). "Хранителен спектър на бухала (Bubo bubo (L., 1758)) (Aves: Strigiformes) в две холоценски находища от Североизточна България" [Food spectrum of the owl (Bubo bubo (L., 1758)) (Aves: Strigiformes) in two Holocene deposits of northeastern Bulgaria]. Historia Naturalis Bulgarica (in Bulgarian). 17: 153–165.
  55. ^ Mirzanejad, H., Gholami, J., & Qashqaei, A. T. (2018). Can Marsh Harrier Circus aeruginosus prey on Great Bustard Otis tarda? Zoology and Ecology, 28(2), 65-68.
  56. ^ a b c d e Bankovics, Attila. "Great Bustard Work Program of Hungary" (PDF). Cms.int.
  57. ^ Magaña, M.; Alonso, J.C.; Martín, C.A.; Bautista, L.M.; Martín, B. (2010). "Nest‐site selection by Great Bustards Otis tarda suggests a trade‐off between concealment and visibility". Ibis. 152 (1): 77–89. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.2009.00976.x. hdl:10261/39088.
  58. ^ (in German). Förderverein Großtrappenschutz e.V. 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-04-03. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
  59. ^ "Zahl der Trappen im Nordburgenland hat sich fast vervierfacht" (in German). Lebensministerium.at. Retrieved 6 September 2013
  60. ^ Martín, C.A.; Martínez, C.; Bautista, L.M.; Martín, B. (2012). "Population increase of the great bustard "Otis tarda" in its main distribution area in relation to changes in farming practices" (PDF). Ardeola. 59: 31–42. doi:10.13157/arla.59.1.2012.31. hdl:10261/67377. S2CID 85775630.
  61. ^ Raab, Rainer; Schütz, Claudia; Spakovszky, Péter; Julius, Eike; Schulze, Christian H. (2011). "Underground cabling and marking of power lines: conservation measures rapidly reduced mortality of West-Pannonian Great Bustards Otis tarda". Bird Conservation International. 22 (3): 299–306. doi:10.1017/S0959270911000463. ISSN 0959-2709.
  62. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 April 2012.
  63. ^ Bewick, Thomas (1847) [1804]. A History of British Birds. Volume 1: Land Birds. Newcastle: R. E. Bewick. p. 372.
  64. ^ "Home". Greatbustard.org. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  65. ^ "New bustard chicks a 'huge step'". BBC. 2 June 2009.
  66. ^ "Salisbury Plain great bustard project EU funding boost". BBC. 19 January 2011.
  67. ^ "Great British bustards". Birdguides.com. 8 June 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Gorman, Gerard (1996). The Birds of Hungary. London: Helm (A&C Black). ISBN 978-0-7136-4235-3.
  • Meissner, Hans Otto (1963). Unknown Europe. trans. Florence and Isabel McHugh. London and Glasgow: Blackie & Sons. pp. 125–139.

External links edit

  • media from ARKive  
  • CMS Great Bustard Memorandum of Understanding
  • BirdLife species factsheet for Otis Tarda
  • Field Guide Page on Flickr
  • "Great bustard media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Great bustard photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)

great, bustard, great, bustard, otis, tarda, bird, bustard, family, only, living, member, genus, otis, breeds, open, grasslands, farmland, from, northern, morocco, south, central, europe, temperate, central, east, asia, european, populations, mainly, resident,. The great bustard Otis tarda is a bird in the bustard family and it is the only living member of the genus Otis 2 It breeds in open grasslands and farmland from northern Morocco South and Central Europe to temperate Central and East Asia European populations are mainly resident but Asian populations migrate farther south in winter It has been listed as a Vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List since 1996 1 Great bustardConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder OtidiformesFamily OtididaeGenus OtisSpecies O tardaBinomial nameOtis tardaLinnaeus 1758Range of Otis tarda Breeding Resident Passage Non breedingPortugal and Spain now have about 60 of the world s population 3 It was driven to extinction in Great Britain when the last bird was shot in 1832 Since 1998 The Great Bustard Group have helped reintroduce it into England 4 on Salisbury Plain a British Army training area Here the lack of public access and disturbance allows them the seclusion they and other animals desire especially as a large ground nesting bird Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Migration 4 2 Reproduction 4 3 Diet 4 4 Foraging 4 5 Mortality 5 Population distribution 6 Threats and conservation status 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy editThe genus Otis was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae 5 it came from the Greek name ὠtis ōtis 6 used for this species 7 taken from Natural History by Pliny the Elder published around 77 AD which briefly mentions a bird like it it was also given the name wtidos ōtidos and the Latin aves tardas a mentioned by the Pierre Belon in 1555 and Ulisse Aldrovandi in 1600 9 10 The specific epithet tarda comes from the Latin word tardus for slow and deliberate 11 which is apt to describe the typical walking style of the species 12 The Latin phrase avis tarda slow bird is where the word bustard comes from borrowing Old French bistarda 13 14 nbsp A museum display shows male female sexual dimorphism Description edit nbsp Captive male great bustard showing the characteristic long beard like feathers and heavy buildThe adult male great bustard is amongst the heaviest living flying animals A male is typically 90 105 cm 2 ft 11 in 3 ft 5 in tall with a length of around 115 cm 3 ft 9 in and has a 2 1 2 7 m 6 ft 11 in 8 ft 10 in wingspan The male can range in weight from 5 8 to 18 kg 13 to 40 lb 3 15 The heaviest verified specimen collected in Manchuria was about 21 kg 46 lb 15 16 a world record for heaviest flying bird 17 In a study in Spain one male weighed as much as 19 kg 42 lb 18 Larger specimens have been reported but remain unverified Average male weights as reported have been fairly variable in Russia males weighed a median of 9 2 kg 20 lb in Spain males weighed a mean of 11 62 kg 25 6 lb during breeding season and 9 65 kg 21 3 lb during non breeding in Germany males weighed a mean of 11 97 kg 26 4 lb and the Guinness World Records has indicated that male bustards in Great Britain weighed an average of 13 5 kg 30 lb Average weight of males is almost an exact match to that of male Kori bustards Among all flying animals and land birds male Andean condors Vultur gryphus may match or exceed the mean body masses of these male bustards but not their maximum weights Furthermore male swans of the two largest species trumpeter and mute may attain a similar average mass depending on season and region 19 18 20 15 21 22 Among both bustards and all living birds the upper reported mass of this species is rivaled by that of the kori bustard Ardeotis kori which due to its relatively longer tarsi and tail is both longer and taller on average and is less sexually dimorphic 18 In terms of weight ranges reported the great Indian bustard Ardeotis nigriceps also only lags slightly behind these species 19 20 15 nbsp Close up of face The great bustard is also arguably the most sexual dimorphic extant bird species in terms of the size difference between males and females Adult male great bustards measured in Spain weighed on average 2 48 times more than females 23 Going on mass the only known bird with a higher dimorphism is the green peafowl Pavo muticus as the males are apparently near four times as heavy as females 19 16 The female is about a third smaller in linear dimensions typically measuring 75 to 85 cm 2 ft 6 in to 2 ft 9 in in height about 90 cm 2 ft 11 in 22 in length and 180 cm 5 ft 11 in across the wings 3 21 Overall the female s weight can range from 3 1 to 8 kg 6 8 to 17 6 lb 21 Like male weights females weights are quite variable as reported in Germany females had a mean weight of 3 82 kg 8 4 lb in Spain females had a mean weight of 4 35 kg 9 6 lb and in Russia females reportedly had a median weight of 6 kg 13 lb The latter figure indicates that eastern birds presumably O t dybowskii are considerably less sexually dimorphic in body mass than in other populations 19 18 20 Perhaps because of this physical sexual dimorphism there is a skewed sex ratio of about 1 5 1 female to male nbsp Mounted specimen of a female with somewhat more muted tones and a more slender smaller build than the adult maleAn adult male is brown above barred with blackish colouration and white below with a long grey neck and head His breast and lower neck sides are chestnut and there is a golden wash to the back and the extent of these bright colours tending to increase as the male ages In the breeding season the male has long white neck bristles which measure up to 12 15 cm 4 7 5 9 in in length continually growing from the third to the sixth year of life 3 In flight the long wings are predominantly white with brown showing along the edges of the lower primary and secondary feathers and a dark brown streak along the upper edge of the wing The breast and neck of the female are buff with brown and pale colouration over the rest of the plumage rendering it well camouflaged in open habitats Immature birds resemble the female The eastern subspecies O t dybowskii is more extensively grey in colour in both sexes with more extensive barring on the back 3 The great bustard has long legs a long neck and a heavy barrel chested body It is fairly typical of the family in its overall shape and habitat preferences Three other bustard species overlap in range with this species the Macqueen s Chlamydotis macqueenii houbara Chlamydotis undulata and little bustards Tetrax tetrax However none of these attains the plumage coloration nor approach the body sizes of this species Thus the great bustard is essentially unmistakable Habitat edit nbsp Great bustards in Spain in fairly typical habitat for the species These birds habitat is grassland or steppe defined by open flat or somewhat rolling landscapes They can be found on undisturbed cultivation and seem to prefer areas with wild or cultivated crops such as cereals vineyards and fodder plants However during the breeding season they actively avoid areas with regular human activity and can be disturbed by agricultural practices Great bustards are often attracted to areas with considerable insect activity The breeding range of the great bustard currently stretches from Portugal to Manchuria though previously the species bred even further east in Russian Primorsky Krai Due to population declines across much of the range more than half of the global population is now found in central Spain with around 30 000 individuals Smaller populations are in southern Russia and the Great Hungarian Plain 24 nbsp Adult male great bustard in habitat Behaviour editThe species is gregarious especially in winter when gatherings of several dozen birds may occur Male and female groups do not mix outside of the breeding season The great bustard has a stately slow walk but tends to run when disturbed rather than fly Running speeds have not been measured but adult females have been known to outrun red foxes Vulpes vulpes which can reach a trotting speed of 48 km h 30 mph 25 26 3 Both sexes are usually silent but can engage in deep grunts when alarmed or angered The displaying adult male may produce some booming grunting and raucous noises The female may utter some guttural calls at the nest and brooded young make a soft trilling call in communication with their mothers Migration edit Some individuals in Iberian populations make short seasonal movements of 5 200 km particularly males which appear to move in response to higher summer temperatures 27 28 European populations are sedentary or make irregular movements in response to severe winter weather 29 30 Populations breeding along the Volga River in Russia migrate 1000 km to overwinter in Crimea and Kherson Oblast 31 Populations breeding in northern Mongolia migrate over 2000 km to overwinter in Shaanxi Province of China 32 In migratory populations great bustards often gather in larger numbers at pre migratory sites in order to move collectively to winter grounds In the Iberian Peninsula bustards that engage in migration seem to choose different periods for movements based on sex 33 34 35 36 37 No population is known to use the same grounds for wintering and summering 38 Great Bustards are strong fliers and reach speeds of 48 km h 30 mph to 98 km h 60 miles hr during migration 32 nbsp A great bustard in flight Reproduction edit nbsp Male Bustard display nbsp Eggs Collection Museum WiesbadenThe great bustard breeds in March and a single male may mate with up to five females Before mating the males moult into their breeding plumage around January Males establish dominance in their groups during winter clashing violently by ramming into and hitting each other with their bills 3 Like other bustards the male great bustard displays and competes for the attention of females on what is known as a lek In this species the male has a flamboyant display beginning with the strutting male puffing up his throat to the size of a football He then tilts forwards and pulls his head in so that the long whiskery chin feathers point upwards and the head is no longer visible He next cocks his tail flat along his back exposing the normally hidden bright white plumage then he lowers his wings with the primary flight feathers folded but with the white secondaries fanning out 39 The displaying males who may walk around for several minutes at a time with feathers flared and head buried waiting for hens to arrive have been described as a foam bath because of their appearance 18 All breeding great bustards also moult again from June to September One to three olive or tan coloured glossy eggs two eggs being the average are laid by the female in May or June The nests which are shallow scrapes made by the female on dry soft slopes and plains are usually situated close to the prior lek location Nests are situated in sparse clusters with a study in Inner Mongolia finding nests at a minimal 9 m 30 ft apart from each other In the same study nests were placed at mid elevation on a hill at about 190 to 230 m 620 to 750 ft Nesting sites are typically in dense grassy vegetation about 15 to 35 cm 5 9 to 13 8 in likely for protection against predation with extensive exposure to sunlight 40 Eggs weigh about 150 g 5 3 oz and are on average 79 4 mm 3 13 in tall by 56 8 mm 2 24 in wide The female incubates the eggs alone for 21 to 28 days The chicks almost immediately leave the nest after they hatch although they do not move very far from their mother until they are at least 1 year old Young great bustards begin developing their adult plumage at about 2 months and begin to develop flying skills at the same time They practice by stretching running flapping and making small hops and jumps to get airborne By three months they are able to fly reasonable distances If threatened the young stand still using their downy plumage mainly sepia in colour with paler buffy streaks as camouflage Juveniles are independent by their first winter but normally stay with their mother until the next breeding season Males usually start to mate from 5 to 6 years of age although may engage in breeding display behaviour at a younger age Females usually first breed at 2 to 3 years old 3 39 Diet edit The species is omnivorous taking different foods in differing seasons In northwestern Spain in August 48 4 of the diet of adult birds was green plant material 40 9 was invertebrates and 10 6 was seeds In the same population during winter seeds and green plant material constituted almost the entirety of the diet Alfalfa is seemingly preferred in the diet of birds from Spain 41 Other favoured plant life in the diet can include legumes crucifers common dandelion and grapes and the dry seeds of wheat and barley 3 Among animal prey insects are generally eaten and are the main food for young bustards in their first summer though they then switch to the seasonal herbivorous preferences of adults by winter Coleoptera including beetles Hymenoptera including bees wasps and ants and Orthoptera including crickets grasshoppers and locusts are mainly taken largely based on availability and abundance Small vertebrates including small rodents frogs lizards and chicks of other birds may supplement the diet when the opportunity arises 3 42 Great bustards may eat toxic blister beetles of the genus Meloe to self medicate Zoopharmacognosy 43 increasing sexual arousal of males 44 Some plants selected in the mating season showed in vitro activity against laboratory models of parasites and pathogens 45 Foraging edit In winter the feeding intensity increased and then decreased through the morning in both sexes and was lower in flocks of males than in flocks of females This sexual difference is greater where legume availability was smaller in central Spain 46 Males that foraged slightly less intensively than females could compensate with longer periods of foraging 47 and bigger bite size 48 that would allow them to obtain enough food relative to their absolute daily energy requirements The size of morning foraging area is smaller in sites with more legume availability likely because legumes are the most preferred substrate type 46 Mortality edit Great bustards typically live for around 10 years but some have been known to live up to 15 years or more The maximum known life span for the species was 28 years Adult males seem to have a higher mortality rate than females due mainly to fierce intraspecies fighting with other males during the breeding season Many males may perish in their first couple of years of maturity due to this cause 21 Although little detailed information has been obtained of predators over 80 of great bustards die in the first year of life and many are victims of predation Chicks are subject to predation by the fact that they are ground dwelling birds which are reluctant to fly Predators of eggs and hatchlings include raptors corvids hedgehogs foxes weasels badgers Meles ssp martens Martes ssp rats Rattus ssp and wild boars Sus scrofa The most serious natural predators of nests are perhaps red foxes and hooded crows Corvus cornix 49 Chicks grow very quickly by 6 months being nearly two thirds of their adult size and are predated by foxes lynxes wolves Canis lupus dogs jackals and eagles 50 Predation on adult male great bustards has been reportedly committed by white tailed eagles Haliaeetus albicilla while golden eagles Aquila chrysaetos are potential predators and eastern imperial eagles Aquila heliaca have been known to prey on great bustards but not likely to include adult males 51 52 53 Great bustards of unspecified age and sex have been found amongst Eurasian eagle owl Bubo bubo prey remains in Bulgaria 54 A possible act of predation on a great bustard was observed to be committed by a much smaller raptor the western marsh harrier Circus aeruginosus though it was likely that this bustard was weak or injured if it was taken alive 55 The bold conspicuous behaviour of the breeding adult male bustard may attract the same large mammalian predators that predate chicks such as wolves and lynx while the more inconspicuous female may sometimes be attacked by various predators However predation is generally fairly rare for adults due to their size nimbleness and safety in numbers due to their social behaviour 3 21 56 57 Occasionally other natural causes may contribute to mortality in the species especially starvation in harsh winter months 56 However major causes of mortality in recent centuries have been largely linked to human activity as described below Population distribution edit nbsp Bustard juvenileAs of 2008 the global population numbered between 44 000 and 51 000 birds Palacin amp Alonso 2008 about 38 000 to 47 000 in Europe with 30 000 or more than half in Spain Hungary had the next largest Great Bustard population with about 1 555 in the year 2012 followed by Ukraine and Austria Between 4 200 and 4 500 were found in east Asia 24 In recent times there have been steep declines throughout eastern and central Europe and in Asia particularly in Kazakhstan and Mongolia citation needed Range 2008 Presence CountriesNative Afghanistan Armenia Austria Azerbaijan Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria China Croatia Czech Republic France Georgia Germany Greece Hungary Iran Iraq Italy Kazakhstan Moldova Mongolia Montenegro Morocco North Macedonia Portugal Romania Russia Serbia Slovakia Spain Syria Tajikistan Turkey Turkmenistan Ukraine United Kingdom UzbekistanRegionally extinct Algeria Lithuania Myanmar Poland Sweden Switzerland KyrgyzstanVagrant Albania Belgium Cyprus Denmark Egypt Finland Gibraltar Ireland Israel Japan Korea Latvia Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Saudi Arabia TunisiaPresence uncertain Lebanon PakistanSizeable populations exist in Spain 23 055 birds Russia 8 000 birds Turkey 800 3 000 birds Portugal 1 435 birds and Mongolia 1 000 birds In Germany and Austria the populations are small Germany 2016 232 birds Austria 2012 335 birds but steadily growing for about two decades 58 59 Elsewhere the populations are declining due to habitat loss throughout its range A sizeable population also exists in Hungary 1 100 1 300 birds where the Eastern European steppe zone ends near Devavanya town and also in the Hortobagy National Park Nagykunsag and Nagy Sarret regions The population is down from a population of 10 000 12 000 before the Second World War Agrienvironment schemes as unirrigated legumes fostered a population increase of great bustards in Castilla y Leon central Spain 60 Threats and conservation status edit nbsp Adult great bustards The great bustard is classified as vulnerable at the species level There are myriad threats faced by great bustards Increasing human disturbance could lead to habitat loss caused by the ploughing of grasslands intensive agriculture afforestation increased development of irrigation schemes and the construction of roads power lines fencing and ditches Mechanisation chemical fertilizers and pesticides fire and predation by dogs are serious threats for chicks and juveniles and hunting of adults contributes to high mortality in some of their range countries Agricultural activity is a major disturbance at nest and in Hungary few successful nests are found outside of protected areas 56 Bustards despite their large size are able to fly at high speed and are often mutilated or killed by overhead electricity cables which are placed in the West Pannonia region of Eastern Austria and Western Hungary just at their flying height The electricity companies affected have buried part of the dangerous cables and have marked remaining aerial parts with fluorescent markers to warn off the birds These measures have rapidly reduced bustard mortality 56 61 Bustards are also occasionally killed by collisions with automobiles or by entanglement in wires 56 nbsp Wood engraving by Thomas Bewick in his A History of British Birds 1797 he was concerned about their probable local extinction A horseman and greyhound gallop after another bustard in the background The great bustard was formerly native in Great Britain and a bustard forms part of the design of the Wiltshire Coat of Arms and as supporters for the Cambridgeshire arms 62 As early as 1797 the naturalist and wood engraver Thomas Bewick commented in his A History of British Birds that Both this the little bustard and the Great Bustard are excellent eating and would well repay the trouble of domestication indeed it seems surprising that we should suffer these fine birds to be in danger of total extinction although if properly cultivated they might afford as excellent a repast as our own domestic poultry or even as the Turkey for which we are indebted to distant countries 63 Bewick s prediction was correct the great bustard was hunted out of existence in Britain by the 1840s In 2004 a project overseeing the reintroduction to Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire using eggs taken from Saratov in Russia was undertaken by The Great Bustard Group 64 a UK Registered Charity that aims to establish a self sustaining population of great bustards in the UK The reintroduced birds have laid eggs and raised chicks in Britain in 2009 and 2010 Although the great bustard was once native to Britain great bustards are considered an alien species under English law 65 The reintroduction of the great bustard to the UK by the Great Bustard Group is being carried out in parallel with researchers from the University of Bath who are providing insight into the habitat of native great bustard populations in Russia and Hungary On January 19 2011 it was announced that the Great Bustard Project had been awarded EU LIFE funding reportedly to the tune of 1 8 million 66 By 2020 the population in Wiltshire exceeded 100 birds 67 In Hungary where the species is the national bird great bustards are actively protected The Hungarian authorities are seeking to preserve the long term future of the population by active protection measures the area affected by the special ecological treatment had grown to 15 km2 5 8 sq mi by the summer of 2006 disputed discuss Under the auspices of the Convention on Migratory Species of Wild Animals CMS also known as the Bonn Convention the Memorandum of Understanding MoU on the Conservation and Management of Middle European Populations of the Great Bustard was concluded and came into effect on June 1 2001 The MoU provides a framework for governments scientists conservation bodies and others to monitor and coordinate conservation efforts in order to protect the middle European populations of the great bustard Notes edit proximae iis sunt quas Hispania aves tardas appellat Graecia wtidos damnatas in cibis emissa enim ossibus medulla odoris taedium extemplo sequitur Next to these are the birds that Spain calls tardae and Greece otides which are condemned as an article of diet because when the marrow is drained out of their bones a disgusting smell at once follows 8 References edit a b c BirdLife International 2017 Otis tarda IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T22691900A119044104 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T22691900A119044104 en Retrieved 27 January 2022 Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds 2023 Turacos bustards cuckoos mesites sandgrouse World Bird List Version 13 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 18 February 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k del Hoyo J Elliot A Sargatal J 1996 Handbook of the Birds of the World Vol 3 Barcelona Lynx Edicions ISBN 978 84 87334 20 7 Reintroducing the great bustard to Southern England RSPB Retrieved 2015 12 26 Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol 1 10th ed Holmiae Stockholm Laurentii Salvii p 154 Jobling James A 2010 Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London UK Christopher Helm p 286 ISBN 978 1 4081 3326 2 OCLC 659731768 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1940 ὠtis A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Digital Library Pliny Natural History III Libri VIII XI The Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rachham H Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1967 pp 328 329 Belon Pierre 1555 L histoire de la natvre des oyseavx avec levrs descriptions amp naifs portraicts retirez du natvrel escrite en sept livres in French Paris Gilles Corrozet pp 235 237 Aldrovandi Ulisse 1637 1600 Vlyssis Aldrovandi philosophi ac medici Bononiensis historiam naturalem in gymnasio Bononiensi profitentis Ornithologiae in Latin Vol 2 Bononiae Bologna Italy Apud Nicolaum Tebaldinum p 85 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 tardus A Latin Dictionary Perseus Digital Library Great Bustard Otis tarda Information on Great Bustard Encyclopedia of Life Retrieved 21 August 2012 Turner William 1903 1544 Turner on birds a short and succinct history of the principal birds noticed by Pliny and Aristotle first published by Doctor William Turner 1544 in Latin and English Translated by Evans A H Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp xvi 130 131 Turner William 1544 Avium praecipuarum quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est brevis et succincta historia in Latin Cambridge Ioan Gymnicus pp 72 73 a b c d Wood Gerald 1983 The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats Guinness Superlatives ISBN 978 0 85112 235 9 a b Naish Darren 6 April 2010 The Great bustard returns Tetrapod Zoology scienceblogs com Archived from the original on 23 November 2011 Retrieved 21 August 2012 Bird D M 1999 The Bird Almanac The Ultimate Guide to Essential Facts and Figures of the World s Birds Buffalo N Y ISBN 1 55209 323 9 OCLC 40051530 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e Alonso J C Magana M Palacin C Martin C 2010 Correlates of male mating success in great bustard leks the effects of age weight and display effort Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 64 1 1589 1600 doi 10 1007 s00265 010 0972 6 hdl 10261 76985 S2CID 8741416 a b c d Dunning John B Jr ed 2008 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd ed CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 a b c Dunning John B Jr ed 1992 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 4258 5 a b c d e What are Great Bustards Great Bustard Group Retrieved 21 June 2012 a b Payne Galleway 2009 Letters to Young Shooters on the Choice and Use of a Gun General Books LLC ISBN 978 1 150 35645 2 Alonso J C Magana M Alonso J A Palacin C Martin C A Martin B 2009 The Most Extreme Sexual Size Dimorphism among Birds Allometry Selection and Early Juvenile Development in the Great Bustard Otis tarda The Auk 126 3 657 665 doi 10 1525 auk 2009 08233 hdl 10261 76983 S2CID 51741160 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b great bustards Distribution and population numbers International Technisches Buro fur Biologie Mag Dr Rainer Raab 16 January 2018 Great Bustard Wildlife In The Westcountry Westcountrywildlife com Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 21 August 2012 BioKIDS Kids Inquiry of Diverse Species Critter Catalog Vulpes vulpes red fox Biokids umich edu 27 September 2007 Retrieved 21 August 2012 Alonso J A Martin C A Alonso J C Morales M B Lane S J October 2001 Seasonal Movements of Male Great Bustards in Central Spain Journal of Field Ornithology 72 4 504 508 doi 10 1648 0273 8570 72 4 504 ISSN 0273 8570 S2CID 84271738 Alonso Juan C Palacin Carlos Alonso Javier A Martin Carlos A October 2009 Post breeding migration in male great bustards low tolerance of the heaviest Palaearctic bird to summer heat Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 63 12 1705 1715 doi 10 1007 s00265 009 0783 9 ISSN 0340 5443 S2CID 33383795 Streich Wolf Jurgen Litzbarski Heinz Ludwig Bernd Ludwig Stefan March 2006 What triggers facultative winter migration of Great Bustard Otis tarda in Central Europe European Journal of Wildlife Research 52 1 48 53 doi 10 1007 s10344 005 0007 1 ISSN 1612 4642 S2CID 23334564 Block Birgit 1996 Wiederfunde von in Buckow ausgewilderten Grosstrappen Otis t tarda L 1758 Ringfundmitteilung 6 1995 der Vogelwarte Hiddensee Naturschutz und Landschaftspflege in Brandenburg 1 2 76 79 Watzke Henrik 2001 Der Zug von Grosstrappen Otis tarda aus der Region Saratov Russland erste Ergebnisse der Satellitentelemetrie im Rahmen eines Schutzprojektes Vogelwelt 122 89 94 a b Kessler A E Batbayar N Natsagdorj T Batsuur D Smith A T July 2013 Satellite telemetry reveals long distance migration in the Asian great bustard Otis tarda dybowskii Journal of Avian Biology 44 4 311 320 doi 10 1111 j 1600 048X 2013 00072 x Morales Manuel B Alonso Juan C Alonso Javier A Martin Enrique 2000 Migration Patterns in Male Great Bustards Otis tarda PDF The Auk 117 2 493 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2000 117 0493 MPIMGB 2 0 CO 2 hdl 10261 77907 ISSN 0004 8038 S2CID 20600263 Alonso Juan C Morales Manuel B Alonso Javier A 2000 Partial Migration and Lek and Nesting Area Fidelity in Female Great Bustards The Condor 102 1 127 doi 10 1650 0010 5422 2000 102 0127 PMALAN 2 0 CO 2 hdl 10261 77120 ISSN 0010 5422 S2CID 44041490 Lane Simon J Alonso Juan C Martin Carlos A 2001 Habitat preferences of great bustardOtistardaflocks in the arable steppes of central Spain are potentially suitable areas unoccupied Journal of Applied Ecology 38 1 193 203 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2664 2001 00577 x ISSN 0021 8901 Palacin Carlos Alonso Juan C Alonso Javier A Martin Carlos A Magana Marina Martin Beatriz 2009 Differential Migration by Sex in the Great Bustard Possible Consequences of an Extreme Sexual Size Dimorphism Ethology 115 7 617 626 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2009 01647 x ISSN 0179 1613 Palacin Carlos Alonso Juan C Alonso Javier A Magana Marina Martin Carlos A 2011 Cultural transmission and flexibility of partial migration patterns in a long lived bird the great bustard Otis tarda Journal of Avian Biology 42 4 301 308 doi 10 1111 j 1600 048X 2011 05395 x ISSN 0908 8857 S2CID 73664186 Species factsheet Otis tarda Birdlife org BirdLife International 2012 Retrieved 21 August 2012 a b Otis tarda great bustard Nhm ac uk London Natural History Museum Retrieved 21 August 2012 Wan D Gao W Zhao J Wang H Cheng J 2002 On nest site selection of Otic sic tarda Ying yong sheng tai xue bao The journal of applied ecology Zhongguo sheng tai xue xue hui Zhongguo ke xue yuan Shenyang ying yong sheng tai yan jiu suo zhu ban 13 11 1445 1448 PMID 12625004 Lane S J Alonso J C Alonso J A Naveso M A 1999 Seasonal changes in diet and diet selection of great bustards Otis t tarda in north west Spain Journal of Zoology 247 2 201 214 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1999 tb00984 x Bravo Carolina Ponce Carlos Palacin Carlos Carlos Alonso Juan 2012 Diet of young Great Bustards Otis tarda in Spain Sexual and seasonal differences Bird Study 59 2 243 251 doi 10 1080 00063657 2012 662940 S2CID 85874066 Bravo C Bautista L M Garcia Paris M Blanco G Alonso J C 2014 Males of a Strongly Polygynous Species Consume More Poisonous Food than Females PLOS ONE 9 10 e111057 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9k1057B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0111057 PMC 4206510 PMID 25337911 Heneberg P 2016 On Otis tarda and Marquis de Sade what motivates male Great Bustards to consume Blister Beetles Meloidae Journal of Ornithology 57 4 1123 1125 doi 10 1007 s10336 016 1369 8 S2CID 17325635 Bautista L M Bolivar P Gomez Munoz M T Martinez Diaz R A Andres M F Alonso J C Bravo C Gonzalez Coloma A 2022 Bioactivity of plants eaten by wild birds against laboratory models of parasites and pathogens PDF Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 10 1027201 doi 10 3389 fevo 2022 1027201 a b Bautista L M Bravo C Ponce C Unzue D Alonso J C 2017 Food availability but not sex determines morning foraging area size in the Great Bustard Otis tarda the most sexually size dimorphic bird species Ardeola 64 2 289 303 doi 10 13157 arla 64 2 2017 ra1 hdl 10261 145769 S2CID 91068606 Martinez C 2000 Daily activity patterns of Great Bustards Otis tarda PDF Ardeola 47 1 57 68 Alonso J C Magana M Alonso J A Palacin C Martin C Martin B 2009 The most extreme sexual size dimorphism among birds allometry selection and early juvenile development in the great bustard Otis tarda Auk 126 3 657 665 doi 10 1525 auk 2009 08233 hdl 10261 76983 S2CID 51741160 Threats Grosstrappe at Abdulkarimi R Abbasnejad H Ahmadi M 2010 A Note on the Breeding of the Great Bustard Otis tarda on Sootav Plain Boukan Northwestern Iran Podoces 5 2 104 106 Love J A 1983 The return of the Sea Eagle Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 25513 9 Sastre P Ponce C Palacin C Martin C A amp Alonso J C 2009 Disturbances to great bustards Otis tarda in central Spain human activities bird responses and management implications European Journal of Wildlife Research 55 4 425 432 Horvath M Solti B Fater I Juhasz T Haraszthy L Szitta T Ballok Z amp Pasztory Kovacs S 2018 Temporal changes in the diet composition of the Eastern Imperial Eagle Aquila heliaca in Hungary Ornis Hungarica 26 1 1 26 Mitev I Boev Z 2006 Hranitelen spektr na buhala Bubo bubo L 1758 Aves Strigiformes v dve holocenski nahodisha ot Severoiztochna Blgariya Food spectrum of the owl Bubo bubo L 1758 Aves Strigiformes in two Holocene deposits of northeastern Bulgaria Historia Naturalis Bulgarica in Bulgarian 17 153 165 Mirzanejad H Gholami J amp Qashqaei A T 2018 Can Marsh Harrier Circus aeruginosus prey on Great Bustard Otis tarda Zoology and Ecology 28 2 65 68 a b c d e Bankovics Attila Great Bustard Work Program of Hungary PDF Cms int Magana M Alonso J C Martin C A Bautista L M Martin B 2010 Nest site selection by Great Bustards Otis tarda suggests a trade off between concealment and visibility Ibis 152 1 77 89 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 2009 00976 x hdl 10261 39088 2016 232 Grosstrappen in Deutschland in German Forderverein Grosstrappenschutz e V 2016 Archived from the original on 2016 04 03 Retrieved 2016 04 03 Zahl der Trappen im Nordburgenland hat sich fast vervierfacht in German Lebensministerium at Retrieved 6 September 2013 Martin C A Martinez C Bautista L M Martin B 2012 Population increase of the great bustard Otis tarda in its main distribution area in relation to changes in farming practices PDF Ardeola 59 31 42 doi 10 13157 arla 59 1 2012 31 hdl 10261 67377 S2CID 85775630 Raab Rainer Schutz Claudia Spakovszky Peter Julius Eike Schulze Christian H 2011 Underground cabling and marking of power lines conservation measures rapidly reduced mortality of West Pannonian Great Bustards Otis tarda Bird Conservation International 22 3 299 306 doi 10 1017 S0959270911000463 ISSN 0959 2709 Cambridgeshire County Council Arms PDF Archived from the original PDF on 24 April 2012 Bewick Thomas 1847 1804 A History of British Birds Volume 1 Land Birds Newcastle R E Bewick p 372 Home Greatbustard org Retrieved 8 October 2022 New bustard chicks a huge step BBC 2 June 2009 Salisbury Plain great bustard project EU funding boost BBC 19 January 2011 Great British bustards Birdguides com 8 June 2022 Further reading editGorman Gerard 1996 The Birds of Hungary London Helm A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 7136 4235 3 Meissner Hans Otto 1963 Unknown Europe trans Florence and Isabel McHugh London and Glasgow Blackie amp Sons pp 125 139 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Otis tarda nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Otis tarda Great bustard Otis tarda media from ARKive nbsp CMS Great Bustard Memorandum of Understanding BirdLife species factsheet for Otis Tarda Field Guide Page on Flickr Great bustard media Internet Bird Collection Great bustard photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great bustard amp oldid 1183128838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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