LONG-TERM MONITORING OF A PEREGRINE FALCON POPULATION: SIZE, BREEDING PERFORMANCE AND NEST-SITE CHARACTERISTICS

2008 
Results: A total of 120 breeding attempts were counted. The average breeding density in the study area was 0.41 ± 0.09 pairs / 100km 2 . The number of breeding pairs increased from 5 in 1982 to 9 in 2002. No differences in breeding performance were detected, neither between territories nor between years. Nests were placed in caves, cracks and holes, and peregrines even used nests originally built by corvids and large eagles for breeding. Territory alternation with other cliff-nesting birds was frequent, with cliffs occupied by common ravens, Eurasian kestrels and Bonelli's eagles. Conclusions: The population has doubled since the beginning of the monitoring, twenty-one years ago. Breeding parameters are of the highest reported in the world, although it could be caused by a low sample size. Notwithstanding, it suggests an optimum state of the population in the study area.
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