Abstract
We studied sex differences in collision mortality in adult Common Terns (Sterna hirundo) at a wind farm in the direct vicinity of a breeding site in Zeebrugge, Belgium in 2005-2007. In total, 64 fatalities were collected and sexed, of which 64% were males. Uneven sex ratio among these birds was most pronounced during the period of incubation and early chick feeding (15 May-15 June), when 78% of the 28 mortalities were male. During prelaying and feeding of young, the sex ratio of mortalities did not differ from equality. We argue that sex-biased collision mortality in Common Terns does not result from morphological differences between the sexes, but rather reflects differences in foraging frequency between males and females during egg-laying and incubation. © The Cooper Ornithological Society 2008.
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Stienen, E. W. M., Courtens, W., Everaert, J., & Van de Walle, M. (2008). Sex-Biased mortality of common terns in wind farm collisions. Condor, 110(1), 154–157. https://doi.org/10.1525/cond.2008.110.1.154
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