Earth (Aug 2024)

The Impact of Land Cover on Nest Occupancy of the White Stork (<i>Ciconia ciconia</i> (L.)): A Case Study of Kampinos Forest, 2006–2018

  • Joanna Bihałowicz,
  • Axel Schwerk,
  • Izabela Dymitryszyn,
  • Adam Olszewski,
  • Jan Stefan Bihałowicz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/earth5030019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
pp. 336 – 353

Abstract

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Land cover is one of the spatial factors influencing the ecological niche of animal populations. Some types of land cover predetermine a particular site as a habitat for certain species. One of the flagship species of agrocenosis is the white stork (Ciconia ciconia (L.)). This study focuses on the occupancy of 122 nests in the vicinity of Kampinos National Park in Poland. This area is a mixture of traditional agricultural settlements, forests, the Vistula valley, and the suburbs of Warsaw, Poland. This mix allows for the identification of land cover disturbances that affect the white stork’s nest occupancy. The current state of development and the efficiency of remote sensing-based land cover databases allows us to easily identify spatial factors affecting nest occupancy and to analyse them in a longer timeframe. The study analyses land cover in buffers of 1 to 5 km around white stork nests based on CORINE Land Cover (CLC) for the years 2006, 2012, and 2018. Although the white stork’s habitat is well studied, the CLC-based results provide significant new insights. The results show that nest occupancy increases with an increasing proportion of agricultural land, especially with significant natural vegetation, while the proportion of wetlands and water is not significant. This work provides a description of the ideal habitat for the white stork in terms of nest occupancy.

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