Stock Dove - Ecology

Ecology

Stock Dove is a tree hole nesting species which is in sharp decline, from habitat loss combined with hunting pressure. In part of its European and western Asiatic range the Stock Dove is a migrant. There has been a sharp decline in France (- 57% in 1976), although the species is not considered threatened in Europe, although it is classified in Schedule 2 to the Birds Directive and Annex III the Berne Convention the number of wintering birds in France would be 100 000 to 200 000 Stock Doves.

The nest is usually in a hole in an old tree. Before deforestation, the Stock Dove was the most frequent pigeon, nesting mostly in oak or pine wood, but as it usually nests in cavities in trees it was normally only found in old forests. In plantations there are not as many holes to nest in, so it is scarcer. In addition, as the Stock Dove is double brooded, a second hole is required for the second brood. They have even been found to nest in rabbit burrows, ruins with cavities large enough to host nesting and old poplar hedges which have numerous cavities for nesting, and in cracks in crag or cliff faces, in ivy, or in the thick growth round the boles of common lime (linden) trees. It will also use nest boxes. Typical inhabitant of extensive agricultural land, the nest hole to nest must be around 75 cm in depth, and the entrance hole should be large enough to permit the passage of the fist. The Stock Dove needs a hole for every incubation. Though nesting material is seldom used, the squabs leave the hole very oily. Stock Doves prefer to nest close together. Outside of the breeding season, Stock Doves roost in cavities too.

The habitats of the Stock Dove are in more or less open country, for though it often nests in trees it prefers parklands to thick woods. It is also common on coasts where the cliffs provide holes. Its flight is quick, performed by regular beats, with an occasional sharp flick of the wings, characteristic of pigeons in general.

It perches well, and in nuptial display walks along a horizontal branch with swelled neck, lowered wings, and fanned tail. During the circling spring flight the wings are smartly cracked like a whip.

Most of its food is plant material; young shoots and seedlings are favoured, and it will take grain as well as insects and snails. In some areas it feeds mostly on acorns and pine seeds with a large proportion of shoots, leaves, insects, small snails and other mollucs. It feeds on a variety of foods including seeds, acorns, berries, bay berries, hawthorn berries, figs, cereal grains, beans, peas, and small invertebrates that obtained while walking on the floor. During autumn migration in October, Stock Doves stop over at places with an abundance of acorns, supplementing the diet with shoots and leaves.

Read more about this topic:  Stock Dove

Famous quotes containing the word ecology:

    ... the fundamental principles of ecology govern our lives wherever we live, and ... we must wake up to this fact or be lost.
    Karin Sheldon (b. c. 1945)