Ábrahám Levente: Biomonitoring a Dráva folyó magyarországi szakasza mentén 2000-2004 - Natura Somogyiensis 7. (Kaposvár, 2005)

Horváth, Győző, Molnár D., Németh Tamás - Csete Sándor: Landscape ecological analysis of barn owl pellet data from the Drava lowlands, Hungary - A Dráva menti gyöngybagoly köpetekből nyert adatok tájökológiai elemzése

Natura Somogyiensis 7 179-189 Kaposvár, 2005 Landscape ecological analysis of barn owl pellet data from the Drava lowlands, Hungary HORVÁTH GYŐZŐ., MOLNÁR DÁNIEL, NÉMETH TAMÁS & CSETE SÁNDOR University of Pécs, Faculty of Sciences; Institute of Biology, Department of Animal Ecology; H-7624 Pécs, Ifjúság u. 6. Hungary; e-mail: horvath@ttk.pte.hu HORVÁTH, GY., MOLNÁR, D., NÉMETH, T., & CSETE, S.: Landscape ecological analysis of barn owl pellet data from the Drava lowlands, Hungary. Abstract: Small mammal fauna monitoring in the Drava Lowlands has been done partly by barn owl pellet collecting and analysis. In the present study the correlations between landscape patterns and barn owl food composition (i.e. the indirect representation of small mammal communities) were analysed using an approach how the cummulated data of particular breeding pairs can be interpreted as characteristic for the patch com­position of the mosaic landscape considerably larger than the hunting range of barn owls. For landscape eco­logical analysis CORTNE LANDCOVER 1:50.000 mapping categories were applied, based on which natural or semi-natural areas, differing from each other also in their barn owl hunting qualities, were differentiated. Three larger areas along river Drava were investigated: two in the upper reach monitoring zone (Zákány­Porrogszentkirály, and Berzence-Heresznye), and one in the lower Drava reach (Drávaiványi-Szaporca). In the two upper-reach zones the localities differed from the greater scale landscape in less than 30% of the patches, with only 3-5 patches showing significant difference. In the lower reach there was one sampling locality with 6 patches differing from the greater-scale area, although in the entire lower section 33% or less difference was found between patch compositions of the two scales. Based on patch overlap calculations and homogeneity tests it was concluded that small mammal faunal data of the localities can be cumulated and can be evaluated on much larger landscape ecological scales than barn owl hunting ranges. Keywords: Landscape pattern, small mammals community, pellet analysis, Ту to alba Introduction The most widely used and, in Hungarian zoological studies, a quite conventional method for general small mammal distribution data analysis and for more detailed pres­ence/absence analysis within particular regions is indirect monitoring using barn owl pellets. This methodology is acceptable from a nature conservation aspect, and is capa­ble of producing masses of abundance data. It allows for both quantitative and qualita­tive analysis of the distribution patterns of small mammal species, and, by using relative abundance values of various species in the particular samples, it also makes possible to compare small mammal communities of various areas. The monitoring, at various depths, of changes in distribution is essential in all Hungarian mammal species (CSORBA and PECSENYE 1997), thus, in small mammals, the most effective data collecting method in the faunal exploration of the Drava Lowlands has been monitoring that relies on barn owl pellet analysis. Besides distribution monitoring, the small mammal fauna of partie-

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