On The Breeding of The Grey Heron Ardea Cinerea in Algeria: Zoology and Ecology July 2014
On The Breeding of The Grey Heron Ardea Cinerea in Algeria: Zoology and Ecology July 2014
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To cite this article: Riad Nedjah, Farrah Samraoui, Abdennour Boucheker, Ahmed H. Alfarhan & Boudjéma
Samraoui (2014): On the breeding of the Grey Heron Ardea cinerea in Algeria, Zoology and Ecology, DOI:
10.1080/21658005.2014.909155
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Zoology and Ecology, 2014
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21658005.2014.909155
During the period 2002–2012, we assessed the breeding status of the Grey Heron Ardea cinerea in Algeria by surveying
all the major wetlands in the region. We located two distinct breeding sites; one of them was recorded for the first time.
We also investigated nest site selection, measured breeding parameters and derived a growth curve for developing
chicks. Although wintering Grey Herons increased in numbers in the region, the number of breeding pairs did not
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change markedly over the past century. The reasons for the scarcity of Grey Heron breeding pairs in Algeria and in the
rest of North Africa are discussed.
2002–2012 metais atlikus stebėjimus didžiausiose regiono pelkėse buvo įvertintas pilkojo garnio Ardea cinerea perėjimas
Alžyre. Aptiktos dvi perimvietės, viena iš jų užregistruota pirmą kartą. Ištirtas lizdo vietos pasirinkimas, perėjimo para-
metrai, sudaryta jauniklių augimo kreivė. Nors per praėjusį šimtmetį žiemojančių pilkųjų garnių skaičius regione didėjo,
perinčių porų skaičius beveik nesikeitė. Straipsnyje aptariamos priežastys, susijusios su nedideliu perinčių pilkųjų garnių
porų skaičiumi Alžyre ir visoje šiaurės Afrikoje.
Keywords: wetlands; water birds; Ardeidae; breeding success; distribution; North Africa
measured. Eggs were weighted using a Pesola spring bal- Phragmites contained a loose colony of the Purple Heron
ance with an accuracy of 0.1 g, and their lengths (L) and Ardea purpurea. The same year, two nests of Grey Heron
breadths (B) were measured to the nearest 0.1 mm using were also discovered at Dakhla, a new breeding site, but
vernier calipers. Egg volume (V, in cm3) was calculated they proved to be inaccessible. They were located in the
using Hoyt’s formula (V = 0.509 L × B2) (Hoyt 1979). middle of a plurispecific heron and ibis colony which
Chicks were individually marked, and their mass, total included Purple Heron Ardea purpurea, Cattle Egret
tarsus, and head and bill length (tip of bill to back of Ardea ibis, Little Egret Egretta garzetta, Black-crowned
skull) were recorded at the age of 1–27 days (Figure 3). Night Heron Nycticorax nycticorax, Squacco Heron
Chicks were measured on 5–6 occasions before they Ardeola ralloides and Glossy Ibis Plegadis falcinellus.
became too mobile and no measurements could be made On 30 May 2007, another nest containing a brood of
after the age of one month. Hatching dates were used to four chicks was discovered at Dakhla. Once again, it
infer the sequence of egg-laying. Data analysis was car- was part of a mixed heron and ibis colony (Figure 2).
ried out using R (R Development Core Team 2009). The latest breeding event was also noted at Dakhla in
Mean values are given ±1 standard deviation (SD). 2012 when a preliminary visit on 26 April allowed the
records of two breeding pairs. A subsequent visit on 30
April led to the discovery of two nests with broods of
Results three and two chicks, respectively. These chicks were
Nesting sites and timing of breeding aged between two and three weeks, indicating a hatching
On 7 April 2006, two nests of Grey Heron, one of them date around 10 April. Based on an incubation period of
unoccupied and the other containing a clutch of three 25–26 days (Cramp and Simmons 1977), the onset of
eggs, were discovered at Lake Fetzara. Both nests were egg-laying must have occurred in the first half of March.
located in a stand of Phragmites australis, which occurred Grey Heron nests were located on Salix atrocinerea
in patches across the marsh. Other nearby stands of surrounded by dense stands of Cladium mariscus and
Zoology and Ecology 3
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Figure 2. General (top) and closer (bottom) view of the heron colony at Dakhla in 2007.
Egg measurements
The mean egg weight, length, breadth and volume
recorded in one single clutch (N = 3 eggs) at Lake
Fetzara were 57.0 ± 5.1 g, 60.9 ± 2.2 mm, 42.2 ± 1.1 mm
and 55.3 ± 4.7 cm3, respectively.
Breeding
In 2006, the fate of the clutch at Lake Fetzara and two
nests at Dakhla could not be monitored but observations
of provisioning by adults in the latter site strongly sug-
gest successful breeding. In 2007, the Grey Heron man-
aged to fledge three chicks out of a brood of four. One
Figure 3. A brood of three Grey Heron nestlings at Dakhla in chick, with a hatching rank C, died within a week. In
2007.
4 R. Nedjah et al.
Table 1. Characteristics of four Grey Heron nests at Lake Fetzara and Dakhla, North-East Algeria.
Sites Ext. diam. (cm) Nesting height (cm) Vegetation Veg. height (cm) Water depth (cm)
Fetzara 100 70 Phragmites australis 300 105
Dakhla 2006 70 160 Salix atrocinerea 310 92
Dakhla 2012 100 100 Salix atrocinerea 350 –
Dakhla 2012 70 240 Salix atrocinerea 350 –
Mean ± SD 85.0 ± 17.3 142.5 ± 75.0 327.5 ± 26.3 98.5 ± 9.2
2012, all five chicks survived up to the fledging time compared to that recorded in Europe (February and
when last monitored. March) (Owen 1955; Milstein, Prestt, and Bell 1970;
Campos and Fernández-Cruz 1991), suggesting late arri-
val of breeding pairs. A ringing scheme is, thus, needed to
Growth of nestlings map up the dispersion and/or migration of breeding Grey
No attempt was made to fit a more elaborate function as Herons in the region to resolve this pending issue.
for the age considered (1–27 days) the growth rates for Answering such questions is of conservation value as
all variables (mass, tarsus, head and bill) (Table 2) conditions at both breeding sites and wintering grounds
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were essentially linear, best described by the equation may influence population dynamics (Den Held 1981;
y = ax + b, calculated by the least squares regression of Cavé 1983; Deerenberg and Hafner 1999; Fasola et al.
body measurements against chick age (Figure 4). 2010).
The Grey Heron occupies larger nests at greater
heights than the Purple Heron does in similar habitats.
Discussion External nest diameters were 85.0 ± 17.3 cm (N = 4) and
This study documents for the first time a successful breed- 50.15 ± 7.21 cm (N = 190), and nest heights were 142.5
ing of the Grey Heron in Algeria suggesting that local ± 75.0 cm (N = 4) and 98.2 ± 36.55 cm for the Grey
habitats are adequate to cater for successful development Heron and Purple Heron, respectively. Data on mean egg
of Grey Heron broods. Ground surveys were used to find weight (57.0 g), length (60.9 mm) and breadth (42.2 mm)
heron nests, although in marshes like Lake Fetzara or the agree well with means and ranges cited in literature
Mekhada aerial surveys are more suited for covering such (Bauer and Glutz Von Blotzheim 1966): weight 60.8 g
huge and inaccessible wetlands. However, numerous visits (48.2–68.5 g), length 60.6 mm (55.4–68.4 mm) and
to all major wetlands in Numidia over 11 consecutive breadth 43.0 mm (39.4–46.4 mm). The recorded breeding
years (Samraoui and Samraoui 2008) make it unlikely that success, though based on a small sample, appears to be
colonies or even large numbers of solitary nests could high although the presence of unoccupied nests may
have escaped our notice. The species previously bred in indicate breeding failure.
Algeria at Lake Fetzara (Heim de Balsac and Mayaud Previous studies of the growth rates of the Grey
1962), Lake Tonga (Ledant et al. 1981) and in a few scat- Heron have shown that chicks at birth have a mass of
tered localities (Isenmann and Moali 2000). Dakhla is a approximately 30 g and that they reach an asymptote of
new breeding site for the Grey Heron in Algeria and is so around 1700 g prior to fledging (Marion 1979). Similar
far an unprotected marsh threatened by human encroach- asymptotes for tarsus and bill were 150 and 118 mm,
ment. Estimates of the present study indicate that the Grey respectively. Heinroth (in Voisin 1991) recorded a maxi-
Heron population in Numidia could not exceed a total of mum food intake of 330 g d−1 for chicks of 17 days of
12–15 breeding pairs. These results are in line with previ- age, which is a real challenge for adults provisioning
ous distribution and estimates of breeding pairs of Grey broods of three or four chicks. The chicks of the Grey
Heron in Algeria. Heron, due to a larger size of the species, exhibit the
It is unknown whether breeding pairs are residents. highest developmental rate among all colonial herons
They might be just aestivating birds like many other colo- and ibis breeding in the region (Table 3).
nial herons (Purple Heron, Squacco Heron, Black- The successful breeding of the Grey Heron in north-
crowned Night Heron). The onset of egg-laying (from east Algeria begs the question why the species does not
March to early April) in Numidia is relatively late breed more frequently in North Africa. Results indicate
that competition with the Purple Heron, suggested as a
possible factor (Fasola and Alieri 1992; Thomas and
Table 2. Growth rates of a brood of Grey Heron chicks from Hafner 2000), may not fully answer the question. Both
1 to 27 days of age at Dakhla in 2007. Grey Heron and Purple Heron favour the same micro-
habitats as nesting sites in Numidia and they were found
Mean Intercept r2 p N (chicks)
to coexist with each other and with other species of her-
−1
Mass gain (g d ) 49.6 67.3 0.97 0.0001 3 ons. Both species are known to occupy a wide range of
Tarsus growth (mm d−1) 4.8 18.3 0.96 0.0001 3 habitats from tall trees to reedbeds (van der Kooij 1991;
Head and bill (mm d−1) 5.2 49.8 0.96 0.0001 3 Voisin 1991; Nedjah et al. 2010), and the habitats, in no
Zoology and Ecology 5
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