Food niche of Gyrfalcon Falco rusticolus nesting in the far north of Finland as compared with other choices of the species

Authors

  • K. Huhtala
  • E. Pulliainen
  • P. Jussila
  • P. S. Tunkkari

Abstract

Food habits of the Gyrfalcon Falco rusticolus were studied in Finnish Forest Lapland by analyzing remnants of prey and pellets from six eyries . Birds made up 98-100% of the total prey biomass identified . Ptarmigan (Willow Grouse Lagopus lagopus and Rock Ptarmigan Lagopus mutus) were the main prey items, constituting 63-86% of the total biomass. In the main study area, SE Forest Lapland, the proportion of ptarmigan in the diet over six years was lower (49-71%) and the diversity higher (H'=0.49-0.65, H'max=0.90) than in Central or WForest Lapland. Large-sized tetraonids and waders were the main alternative prey in SE Forest Lapland, constituting 10-20% and 6-24% of the total biomass, respectively . The Gyrfalcon, a ptarmigan specialist, showed flexibility by responding to high densities of new prey items, e.g . microtines and by switching to preying on waders, especially the very conspicuous and adequate-sized Whimbrel Numenius phaeopus, when the vulnerability of the Willow Grouse decreased, although that species was still the preferred prey.
Section
Research articles

Published

1996-07-01

How to Cite

Huhtala, K., Pulliainen, E., Jussila, P., & Tunkkari, P. S. (1996). Food niche of Gyrfalcon Falco rusticolus nesting in the far north of Finland as compared with other choices of the species. Ornis Fennica, 73(2), 78–87. Retrieved from https://ornisfennica.journal.fi/article/view/133440