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Summary:
Here you get the information about the common cranen in 2003:
Feenstra H. 2003.
The Fochteloėrveen as a nursery for Common Cranes Grus grus
Drentse Vogels 17:22-28.
In the 20th century, Cranes were
passage migrants in The Netherlands; breeding was not recorded.
This changed in 2001, when Cranes bred for the first time in the
Fochteloėrveen, a 2000 ha peat moor relic managed as a nature
reserve along the border of the provinces of Drenthe and
Friesland; a single pair raised one chick. In 2002, two breeding
pairs were present, of which one
raised a chick. One of the adults of the failed pair died in the
course of the summer. In 2003, again two pairs were present. One
pair raised two young in the central part of the peat moor,
whereas the other pair started a clutch outside the core area in a
small fen, surrounded by farmland (potatoes, cereals, grassland),
woodlots and small heaths. This area is thinly populated. Both
pairs were successful (2 and 1 young respectively).
Both pairs apparently preferred remote and quiet areas, where
disturbance was restricted. Nevertheless, the farmland pair had to
switch its foraging area when two meadows were mowed. Also, a
stray dog had a considerable effect on the behaviour of the
farmland pair; both adults stayed in the fen for hours after this
disturbance.
The two pairs that occupied the same breeding site in two
consecutive years both showed an advancement in lay date: the
successful pair of 2002 advanced its lay date by about two weeks
in 2003, the failed pair of 2001 by about a week in 2002.
The expanding Crane population will run into increasing
disturbance from human activities, an inevitable aspect of the
dense human population in The Netherlands. As a matter of fact,
even a large nature reserve like Fochteloėrveen - despite its
size and restricted accessibility - is not safe
haven anymore. During the last decade, nature protection societies
have spend a lot of energy in "selling" nature reserves
to a large public, by providing media attention, new paths, signs,
look-outs, excursions and parking lots, in short: opening up
otherwise fully protected and large areas where nature protection
used to be priority number one. Because of their vulnerability for
disturbance it is still questionable whether Cranes will be able
to sustain and expand this tentative population in the densely
populated Netherlands, where nature protection and recreation are
regarded as basically the same.
Regards,
Herman Feenstra
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