The number of adult Eiders in the Baltic Sea
Main Article Content
Abstract
An aerial census of adult male Eiders Somateria mollissima gathered in postbreeding flocks was made in the Baltic Sea on 29 May-5 June 1973. The dense flocks gather at traditional sites soon after the females start to incubate. 271,000 males were counted, mostly from photographs. This figure was corrected to approximately 297,000, including males still in the breeding areas, males migrating south out of the Baltic to Danish moulting areas and underestimations of numbers in flocks seen. The sex ratio was approximately 1:1, both in counts during spring-migration and on the breeding grounds. Thus the number of adult Eiders was about 594,000 specimens, or 297,000 pairs. This figure corresponds roughly with estimates from winter counts and radar studies of north-migration. The method of censusing Eider males in the Baltic, with male counts in postbreeding flocks, is suggested for monitoring purposes.
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.