ADU CWAC CAR SAFRING SABAP2 SARCA
Email: ADU no.: Password: 
Forgot password?   Remember me
biodiversity monitoring everywhere
Cards:8993
Records:211934
Sites:813
Observers:370
Images:1326

Latest News

Atlas bash to Loeriesfontein, Northern Cape, 8-11 August 2013

Save the date: 20-21 July 2013, SABAP2 workshop, Port Elizabeth

MyBirdPatch workshop: Intaka Island Enviro-Centre, Cape Town, Sat 8 June, 09:00 - 13:00

Making the most of the SABAP2 website - 5: checking your submissions and accessing your ORFs

SABAP2 workshop: Intaka Island, Century City – ths Saturday 11 May, 09h00 – 15h30

SABAP2 reaches 70% coverage in Limpopo

Making the most of the SABAP2 website - 5: checking your submissions and accessing your ORFs

Making the most of the SABAP2 website - 4: finding those gaps and other interesting pentad information!

SABAP2 workshop: Intaka Island, Century City, Sat. 11 May, 9:00 am - 3:30 pm

Weaver Wednesday: Golden Palm Weaver

Colour Rings on Swift Terns

Gravit8 Weaver Wednesday [44]: Speke's Weaver

Gravit8 Weaver Wednesday: Speckle-fronted Weaver

April Aliens – the Common Myna continues its march across the southern African landscape

April Aliens – if the voracious European Shore Crab reaches the Saldanha Bay-Langebaan Lagoon system, well, dot dot dot

The butterfly to think about on Threat Thursday is the Fraternal Widow

The DARK BLUE news – coverage up to 6%

On this Threat Thursday we pay attention to the Black Stork, a species which is not doing well in our region

67%

Threat Thursday in National Water Week : African Marsh Harrier

The GREENest range-change map of all: Southern Masked Weaver

Gravit8 Weaver Wednesday : Southern Red Bishop

Have you seen an unCommon Sandpiper recently?

Today's Snake Sunday focuses on the Western Stripe-bellied Sand Snake

Time for another SCORPION SATURDAY!! Today we are featuring Opistophthalmus lawrencei

Don't delay. Act today. If you have not yet ordered your butterfly atlas, you should do so now

Two-thirds coverage

The good news Threat Thursday: The "Critically Endangered" Waterberg Copper, thought to be extinct, rediscovered on 2 March 2013

The bad news Threat Thursday: The "Critically Endangered" Table Mountain Copper is probably extinct

Threat Thursday moves to the KwaZulu-Natal coast, and contemplates another aristocratic sounding species, the "Critically Endangered" Pickersgill's Reed Frog

A Mad Mammal Monkey for Mad Mammal Monday!

Butterfly atlas Pre-publication offer

Snake Sunday features the Brown House Snake

Southern Bald Ibises building nests on artificial structures

Weaver Wednesday [36]: Taveta Golden Weaver

gravit8

Does this carnage in this picture pose a threat to butterflies?

14087 waterbirds of 68 species were recorded on the Vaaldam CWAC last Sunday

It's World Pangolin Day!

OdonataMAP: "What a terrific response" says Warwick Tarboton, faced with 1514 records to identify!

Annual Report for the ADU 2012

SummerMAP has 20 days to run

Hey, it is Snake Sunday, and we are celebrating the remarkable Beetz's Tiger Snake

Zimbabwe becomes part of the SABAP2 family

What do these species have in common?

What is happening to the Rock Kestrel?

Weaver Wednesday: Holub's Golden Weaver

Today is Sappi TREE TUESDAY! We are featuring a species that attracts birds, Halleria lucida, the Tree Fuchsia

Sssssssssnake Sunday! Today, Schlegel's Beaked Blind Snake

60 enthusiastic birders attended the SABAP2 workshop in Harare today

Sixty six per cent!!

Departmental Seminar, Wednesday 22 August: "Flexible moult strategies allow waders to adjust to varying habitats in southern Africa"

The next Zoology Departmental Seminar will be presented by Dr Magda Remisiewicz at 13h00 on Wednesday 22 August in the Zoology Museum.

Magda is a researcher and lecturer in the Avian Ecophysiology Unit at the Department of Vertebrate Zoology and Ecology, University of Gdansk, Poland. Her research focuses on migration strategies of waders and passerines, and involves the use of ringing, molecular analyses and statistical modelling. Magda completed a post-doc at the ADU in 2008-2010, where she focused on the moult strategies of waders that migrate to southern Africa. During that time she undertook extensive fieldwork at Barberspan Bird Sanctuary in NW Province, concentrating on waders. She also invested a great deal of effort in training the reserve's field rangers in bird ringing and atlasing techniques. At the beginning of 2011 she returned to a teaching and research post at the University of Gdansk, but she visits South Africa and the ADU once or twice a year to continue her research.

The details are below:

Title: "Flexible moult strategies allow waders to adjust to varying habitats in southern Africa"

Abstract: Many waders migrate biannually within Africa or between their breeding grounds in Europe and their non-breeding areas in Africa. Two ecological groups are distinguished: waders that migrate to coastal habitats, which provide a rich and predictable food supply, and species that migrate to inland wetlands, which provide varied and unpredictable feeding conditions. Moult of large flight feathers, especially of the primaries, is critical for migrants to complete their journeys. Waders present a variety of strategies for their moult, which must fit in with their breeding and migration, the other main energy-intensive events in their life cycle. Recent applications of the Underhill-Zucchini moult models allowed an ADU-related team to examine moult timing down to individual feathers and to model the effects of environmental factors on moult. I will present inter- and intraspecific strategies that waders apply to their primary moult when they stay in southern Africa, in the context of their migration strategy, the birds’ size,  age and individual condition, and the habitats they use. The flexibility of moult strategies adopted by waders using freshwater habitats suggests that they have mechanisms to adjust their genetically-controlled and hormonally-regulated moult to proximate factors such as feeding conditions. Discovering these mechanisms is one of the challenges for further studies of moult. 

Speaker: Dr Magda Remisiewicz, Avian Ecophysiology Unit, Department of Vertebrate Zoology and Ecology, University of Gdansk, Poland.

Date: 22 August 2012.

Venue: Zoology Museum, 3rd Floor, Department of Zoology, University of Cape Town.

Time: 13h00 to 14h00.

 


link to this new item


Fatbirder's Top 1000 Birding Websites
Creative Commons License
MyBirdPatch is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
website by michael.brooks
tel. +27 (21) 650 4751 email. michael.brooks[@]uct.ac.za