Recent changes in pair abundance and breeding results in the main French populations of the Common Pochard Aythya ferina
Main Article Content
Abstract
This study explored trends in Common Pochard Aythya ferina breeding abundance in four of the main breeding areas for the species in France (Dombes, Brenne, Forez, Sologne) since 1992. Systematic declines in the ratios of broods to the total numbers of pairs and in brood sizes of one-week-old families, contrasted with no clear changes in duckling survival between 1–3 weeks of age through the study period. Despite similar trends in reproductive measures, Pochard pair density varied unevenly across regions. In Forez, fish farming ceased at many ponds during the 1990s, where pair density initially increased but then declined. In Dombes and Sologne, pair density has apparently declined, whereas density increased in Brenne where ponds are still regularly stocked with fish for fish farming.
Article Details
Articles in Wildfowl volumes 1-74 and in Wildfowl Special Issues 1-7 are not licensed under Creative Commons. In these volumes, all rights are reserved to the authors of the articles respectively.
The Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (which published the journal from 1948–2020 inclusive) retains a royalty-free license in perpetuity to access and use pre-2021 issues for the purposes of research, which may involve sharing with research partners from time to time.
The copyright for this paper belongs to the Author(s). Papers published in Wildfowl 75 (in 2025) and subsequent issues are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
In the articles published in these volumes, all rights are reserved to the authors of the articles respectively. This implies that readers can download, read, and link to the articles, but they cannot republish the articles. Authors can upload their articles into an institutional repository.