Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans

Abstract The quality of swans' nutrition at spring migration stopovers is important for their successful breeding. It is of great interest to study the differences in nutrition of different swan species when sharing the same habitat. Microscopic analysis of Cygnus olor, C. cygnus, and C. columb...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:BMC Ecology and Evolution
Main Authors: Sergei A. Kouzov, Anna V. Kravchuk, Elena M. Koptseva, Yulia I. Gubelit, Elmira M. Zaynagutdinova, Evgeny V. Abakumov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2024-02-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-024-02204-7
_version_ 1850047697486086144
author Sergei A. Kouzov
Anna V. Kravchuk
Elena M. Koptseva
Yulia I. Gubelit
Elmira M. Zaynagutdinova
Evgeny V. Abakumov
author_facet Sergei A. Kouzov
Anna V. Kravchuk
Elena M. Koptseva
Yulia I. Gubelit
Elmira M. Zaynagutdinova
Evgeny V. Abakumov
author_sort Sergei A. Kouzov
collection DOAJ
container_title BMC Ecology and Evolution
description Abstract The quality of swans' nutrition at spring migration stopovers is important for their successful breeding. It is of great interest to study the differences in nutrition of different swan species when sharing the same habitat. Microscopic analysis of Cygnus olor, C. cygnus, and C. columbianus bewickii feces collected in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland in February-April 2014–2019 was performed. We measured food preferences of the three swan species using non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). The width and overlap of dietary niches were also calculated. The diet of C. olor consists almost entirely of soft submerged aquatic vegetation, mainly macroalgae. Samples of the other two species except macroalgae contained large amounts of young shoots and roots of rigid semi-submerged and coastal vegetation. The dietary niche of C. cygnus is the most isolated because it is dominated by thick rhizomes of Phragmites australis, which are hardly used by other swan species. The diet of Bewick’s swans was similar in many respects to that of the Mute swan, but Bewick’s swans much more often preferred vegetative parts of submerged and semi-submerged plants, such as Stuckenia pectinata, Potamogeton perfoliatus, Sparganium sp., Nuphar lutea, and others. Notably, the dietary niches of Mute swan and Whooper swan overlapped as much as possible in February March during a period of severe food shortage, in contrast to later periods in spring when food was more abundant and varied. In general, differences in diets are well explained by differences in the morphology of birds. Comparison of tarsometatarsus indices shows that C. olor is the most water-related species. C. olor has the longest neck and its beak has the strongest filter features, whereas beaks of the other two species shows noticeable “goose-like grazing” features. Moreover, C. Cygnus has the most powerful beak. These features are due to the history of species. The formation of C. olor occurred during the Miocene-Pliocene of the Palaearctic in the warm eutrophic marine lagoons of the Paratethys with abundant soft submerged vegetation. The evolution of C. cygnus and C. c. bewickii took place in Pleistocene. At that time, periglacial and thermokarst water bodies on permafrost became widespread in the Palearctic, as well as dystrophic peat lakes with much poorer submerged aquatic vegetation, but well-developed coastal and semi-submerged vegetation.
format Article
id doaj-art-60eb1fbec8564be99989fc08ee53ca64
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2730-7182
language English
publishDate 2024-02-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-60eb1fbec8564be99989fc08ee53ca642025-08-20T00:28:21ZengBMCBMC Ecology and Evolution2730-71822024-02-0124111810.1186/s12862-024-02204-7Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swansSergei A. Kouzov0Anna V. Kravchuk1Elena M. Koptseva2Yulia I. Gubelit3Elmira M. Zaynagutdinova4Evgeny V. Abakumov5Department of Applied Ecology, St. Petersburg State UniversityDepartment of Applied Ecology, St. Petersburg State UniversityDepartment of Applied Ecology, St. Petersburg State UniversityZoological Institute RASDepartment of Vertebrate Zoology, St. Petersburg State UniversityDepartment of Applied Ecology, St. Petersburg State UniversityAbstract The quality of swans' nutrition at spring migration stopovers is important for their successful breeding. It is of great interest to study the differences in nutrition of different swan species when sharing the same habitat. Microscopic analysis of Cygnus olor, C. cygnus, and C. columbianus bewickii feces collected in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland in February-April 2014–2019 was performed. We measured food preferences of the three swan species using non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). The width and overlap of dietary niches were also calculated. The diet of C. olor consists almost entirely of soft submerged aquatic vegetation, mainly macroalgae. Samples of the other two species except macroalgae contained large amounts of young shoots and roots of rigid semi-submerged and coastal vegetation. The dietary niche of C. cygnus is the most isolated because it is dominated by thick rhizomes of Phragmites australis, which are hardly used by other swan species. The diet of Bewick’s swans was similar in many respects to that of the Mute swan, but Bewick’s swans much more often preferred vegetative parts of submerged and semi-submerged plants, such as Stuckenia pectinata, Potamogeton perfoliatus, Sparganium sp., Nuphar lutea, and others. Notably, the dietary niches of Mute swan and Whooper swan overlapped as much as possible in February March during a period of severe food shortage, in contrast to later periods in spring when food was more abundant and varied. In general, differences in diets are well explained by differences in the morphology of birds. Comparison of tarsometatarsus indices shows that C. olor is the most water-related species. C. olor has the longest neck and its beak has the strongest filter features, whereas beaks of the other two species shows noticeable “goose-like grazing” features. Moreover, C. Cygnus has the most powerful beak. These features are due to the history of species. The formation of C. olor occurred during the Miocene-Pliocene of the Palaearctic in the warm eutrophic marine lagoons of the Paratethys with abundant soft submerged vegetation. The evolution of C. cygnus and C. c. bewickii took place in Pleistocene. At that time, periglacial and thermokarst water bodies on permafrost became widespread in the Palearctic, as well as dystrophic peat lakes with much poorer submerged aquatic vegetation, but well-developed coastal and semi-submerged vegetation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-024-02204-7Feeding ecologyDietFecal analysisMute swanBewick’s swanWhooper swan
spellingShingle Sergei A. Kouzov
Anna V. Kravchuk
Elena M. Koptseva
Yulia I. Gubelit
Elmira M. Zaynagutdinova
Evgeny V. Abakumov
Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
Feeding ecology
Diet
Fecal analysis
Mute swan
Bewick’s swan
Whooper swan
title Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
title_full Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
title_fullStr Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
title_full_unstemmed Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
title_short Ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
title_sort ecological and phylogenetic aspects of the spring diet of three palaearctic species of swans
topic Feeding ecology
Diet
Fecal analysis
Mute swan
Bewick’s swan
Whooper swan
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-024-02204-7
work_keys_str_mv AT sergeiakouzov ecologicalandphylogeneticaspectsofthespringdietofthreepalaearcticspeciesofswans
AT annavkravchuk ecologicalandphylogeneticaspectsofthespringdietofthreepalaearcticspeciesofswans
AT elenamkoptseva ecologicalandphylogeneticaspectsofthespringdietofthreepalaearcticspeciesofswans
AT yuliaigubelit ecologicalandphylogeneticaspectsofthespringdietofthreepalaearcticspeciesofswans
AT elmiramzaynagutdinova ecologicalandphylogeneticaspectsofthespringdietofthreepalaearcticspeciesofswans
AT evgenyvabakumov ecologicalandphylogeneticaspectsofthespringdietofthreepalaearcticspeciesofswans