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Dive into the research topics where Carlos Palacín is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos Palacín.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2008

Natal dispersal in great bustards: the effect of sex, local population size and spatial isolation

Carlos A. Martín; Juan Carlos Alonso; Javier A. Alonso; Carlos Palacín; Marina Magaña; Beatriz Martín

1. We investigated the causes of natal dispersal in four Spanish areas where 35 breeding groups of the polygynous great bustard Otis tarda were monitored intensively. A total of 392 juveniles were radio-tracked between 1991 and 2006 by ground and via aeroplane to avoid potential biases derived from the non-detection of long-distance dispersers. 2. We explored 10 explanatory variables that were related to individual phenotypic features, habitat and conspecific traits in terms of group size and breeding performance, and spatial distribution of available breeding groups. Probability of group change and natal dispersal distances were investigated separately through multifactorial analyses. 3. Natal dispersal occurred in 47.8% of the birds and median natal dispersal distance of dispersers was 18.1 km (range 4.97-178.42 km). Sex largely determined the dispersal probability, with 75.6% of males being dispersers and 80.0% of females being philopatric, in contrast to the general pattern of female-biased dispersal found in most avian species. 4. Both the frequency of natal dispersal and dispersal distances were affected by the spatial distribution of breeding groups. More isolated groups showed a higher proportion of philopatric individuals, the effect being more evident in males than in females. This implies a reduction in gene flow in fragmented populations, as most genetic exchange is achieved through male dispersal. Additionally, dispersers hatched in more isolated groups tended to exhibit longer dispersal distances, which increases the associated energetic costs and mortality risks. 5. The dispersal decision was influenced by the number of conspecifics in the natal group. The individual probability of natal dispersal was related inversely to the size of the natal group, which supports the balanced dispersal model and the conspecific attraction hypothesis. 6. Overall, our results provide a good example of phenotypic plasticity and reinforce the current view that dispersal is an evolutionary complex trait conditioned by the interaction of individual, social and environmental causes that vary between individuals and populations.


Biological Conservation | 2003

Status and recent trends of the great bustard (Otis tarda) population in the Iberian peninsula

Juan Carlos Alonso; Carlos Palacín; Carlos A. Martín

Abstract We present an updated estimate of the great bustard population in the Iberian peninsula. The sum of the most recent counts was 20,243, and the estimated total, 24,490 birds. During the last two decades bustards increased at five intensive study areas, remained stable at two, and declined or became extinct at eight. These population changes were determined by both variations in breeding success at each area and migration of birds between areas. Our results suggest that the population is probably concentrating at high quality areas, and disappearing from poor quality ones. We also identified 29 areas where bustards have become extinct during the last four decades, mostly due to hunting and agricultural transformations. In conclusion, although the population is apparently not decreasing at present, the concentration trend described could lead to a higher species’ vulnerability, a loss of genetic diversity, and a further isolation of marginal groups. Strict conservation measures should thus be directed at preventing the decrease of the number of extant leks.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2010

Correlates of male mating success in great bustard leks: the effects of age, weight, and display effort

Juan Carlos Alonso; Marina Magaña; Carlos Palacín; Carlos A. Martín

We examined how mating success varied in relation to age, weight, body size, and display behavior among great bustard Otis tarda males. The estimated mating success was strongly skewed, with 45% of adult males being involved in copulation attempts and only 9.7% actually seen copulating successfully. Unlike most birds, body size continued increasing in great bustards several years after reaching sexual maturity. Age, weight, and display effort were all significant and independent predictors of male mating success. The higher display effort involved performing longer full-display bouts. Older males could detach from the male flock earlier in the season as well as on each day and spend longer seasonal and daily periods displaying as solitary birds, which contributed to increase their mating success. In contrast, males weighing more did not invest more in display, which suggests that they could be recognized as dominants by other males and selected by females through assessment of their plumage sexual traits. In contrast to most other bird species, the system described for great bustards resembles that found in some lek-mating ungulates, where social rank is a complex trait determined by both age and mass, and as in these mammals, it suggests that sexual selection continues to favor a high male weight in this extremely sexually dimorphic species.


Conservation Biology | 2011

Meta-Analysis of the Effectiveness of Marked Wire in Reducing Avian Collisions with Power Lines

Rafael Barrientos; Juan Carlos Alonso; Carlos Ponce; Carlos Palacín

Collisions of birds with power transmission and distribution lines have been documented for many species, and cause millions of casualties worldwide. Attempts to reduce mortality from such collisions include placing bird flight diverters (i.e., wire markers in the form of, e.g., spirals, swivels, plates, or spheres) on static and some electrified wires to increase their visibility. Although studies of the effectiveness of such devices have yielded contradictory results, the implementation of flight diverters is increasing rapidly. We reviewed the results of studies in which transmission or distribution wires were marked and conducted a meta-analysis to examine the effectiveness of flight diverters in reducing bird mortality. We included in our meta-analysis all studies in which researchers searched for carcasses of birds killed by a collision with wires. In those studies that also included data on flight frequency, we examined 8 covariates of effectiveness: source of data, study design, alternate design (if marked and unmarked spans were alternated in the same line), periodicity of searches for carcasses, width of the search transect, and number of species, lines, and stretches of wire searched. The presence of flight diverters was associated with a decrease in bird collisions. At unmarked lines, there were 0.21 deaths/1000 birds (n =339,830) that flew among lines or over lines. At marked lines, the mortality rate was 78% lower (n =1,060,746). Only the number of species studied had a significant influence on effect size; this was larger in studies that addressed more species. When comparing mortality at marked and unmarked lines, we recommend use of the same time intervals and habitats and standardizing the periodicity of carcass searches.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Wire marking results in a small but significant reduction in avian mortality at power lines: a BACI designed study.

Rafael Barrientos; Carlos Ponce; Carlos Palacín; Carlos A. Martín; Beatriz Martín; Juan Carlos Alonso

Background Collision with electric power lines is a conservation problem for many bird species. Although the implementation of flight diverters is rapidly increasing, few well-designed studies supporting the effectiveness of this costly conservation measure have been published. Methodology/Principal Findings We provide information on the largest worldwide marking experiment to date, including carcass searches at 35 (15 experimental, 20 control) power lines totalling 72.5 km, at both transmission (220 kV) and distribution (15 kV–45 kV) lines. We found carcasses of 45 species, 19 of conservation concern. Numbers of carcasses found were corrected to account for carcass losses due to removal by scavengers or being overlooked by researchers, resulting in an estimated collision rate of 8.2 collisions per km per month. We observed a small (9.6%) but significant decrease in the number of casualties after line marking compared to before line marking in experimental lines. This was not observed in control lines. We found no influence of either marker size (large vs. small spirals, sample of distribution lines only) or power line type (transmission vs. distribution, sample of large spirals only) on the collision rate when we analyzed all species together. However, great bustard mortality was slightly lower when lines were marked with large spirals and in transmission lines after marking. Conclusions Our results confirm the overall effectiveness of wire marking as a way to reduce, but not eliminate, bird collisions with power lines. If raw field data are not corrected by carcass losses due to scavengers and missed observations, findings may be biased. The high cost of this conservation measure suggests a need for more studies to improve its application, including wire marking with non-visual devices. Our findings suggest that different species may respond differently to marking, implying that species-specific patterns should be explored, at least for species of conservation concern.


European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2009

Disturbances to great bustards (Otis tarda) in central Spain: human activities, bird responses and management implications

Pablo Sastre; Carlos Ponce; Carlos Palacín; Carlos A. Martín; Juan Carlos Alonso

We investigated the effects of human activities on the behaviour of great bustards (Otis tarda) in a Special Protection Area in central Spain. We recorded 532 disturbances, at a rate of 0.93 disturbances per hour, a high value compared to other studies. Escape (flight/running) was observed more often than alert. Flight was more frequent than running. Car traffic and walkers were the main sources of disturbance. Motorcyclists, dogs, helicopters and aeroplanes were also harmful in relation to their abundance and time of permanence. Farming and shepherding produced few disturbances and usually did not cause a flight response. These activities are thus considered compatible with the conservation of the great bustards. Hunting caused an increase in the frequency of disturbance on weekends and holidays with respect to working days. We propose access restrictions to car traffic and helicopters/airplanes and hunting limitations in those areas more frequently used by the species.


The Auk | 2009

The Most Extreme Sexual Size Dimorphism Among Birds: Allometry, Selection, and Early Juvenile Development in the Great Bustard (Otis tarda)

Juan Carlos Alonso; Marina Magaña; Javier A. Alonso; Carlos Palacín; Carlos A. Martín; Beatriz Martín

ABSTRACT. The Great Bustard (Otis tarda) is one of the heaviest flying birds and the most sexually dimorphic living bird. Adult males weighed 2.48x more than females, and their linear measurements were 18–30% larger. Weight increased between the prebreeding and breeding seasons by 16% in females and 20% in males. Sexual size dimorphism emerges very early in development and explains why growth in males is so costly. Weight and central toe length were hyperallometric when related to wing length in males but isometric in females and varied more in males, as compared with females and with other male traits. Although hyperallometry and high variability have frequently been used to invoke sexual selection as a driving force, our results support different functional hypotheses for the evolution of each trait. Male—male competition is intense in this lekking species, and high rank among males and access to females are weight-dependent. Thus, sexual selection has likely pushed male weight close to the limit imposed by powered flight. Because Great Bustards are mostly cursorial, the hyperallometry of the central toes of males in relation to wing length most likely evolved for support and balance.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2009

Post-breeding migration in male great bustards: low tolerance of the heaviest Palaearctic bird to summer heat

Juan Carlos Alonso; Carlos Palacín; Javier A. Alonso; Carlos A. Martín

Radio tracking of 142 males captured at 44 leks in Spain showed that partial migration of great bustard males in summer is a widespread behaviour in many Iberian populations, in contrast to their previously assumed sedentariness. A variable number of males migrated immediately after mating to summering areas with lower temperatures and human population densities and more trees and rainfall levels than the breeding sites. Birds selected there fields with trees and sunflower crops which provided shade during the hottest midday hours and protective cover against predators. Males breeding in areas with higher July temperatures had a higher tendency to migrate, and males from hotter, southern regions migrated longer distances than those from milder, northern regions and showed a preferred northward direction. These results confirmed various predictions from the weather sensitivity hypothesis, suggesting that summer migration of great bustard males represents primarily an adaptation to escape the summer heat of most breeding areas in central and southern Iberia. The hypothesis that males migrated to benefit from higher food availability at the summering areas could not be rejected by our results. Finally, migrating males also gained more tranquillity during the post-breeding moult due to the lower human population density at the summering areas. Summer migration of Iberian great bustard males may thus be interpreted as a form of behavioural thermoregulation which has not been described for other Palaearctic populations of this species or for other bird species breeding in temperate latitudes.


Science of The Total Environment | 2011

Side effects of rodent control on non-target species: Rodenticides increase parasite and pathogen burden in great bustards

J.A. Lemus; Carolina Bravo; M. García-Montijano; Carlos Palacín; Carlos Ponce; Marina Magaña; Juan Carlos Alonso

For many years anticoagulant rodenticides have been used in vole control campaigns, in spite of the proven risk of secondary poisoning of non-target predators and scavengers. In this paper we analyse for the first time great bustard exposure and intoxication by anticoagulant rodenticides in Spain, based on residues found in the livers of 71 bustard carcasses collected during 1991-2010. Ten individuals contained chlorophacinone and one flocoumafen. Chlorophacinone level was significantly correlated with the pathogen and parasite burden of intoxicated birds. Moreover, through the last 12 years the annual number of great bustards that present chlorophacinone in liver collected in our study areas was correlated with vole peaks at a nearby area, suggesting that the ingestion of rodenticide was proportional to the amounts spread in the fields. We conclude that rodenticide consumption is a regular event among great bustards when baited cereal is spread on fields, and that this may cause chronic weakening of intoxicated individuals, possibly affecting their survival. Future rodent control actions should consider these negative side effects on non target granivorous steppe and farmland species, particularly when they are globally threatened.


Animal Behaviour | 2011

Age-related dominance helps reduce male aggressiveness in great bustard leks

Marina Magaña; Juan Carlos Alonso; Carlos Palacín

Stable dominance hierarchies have evolved in many socially living animals to reduce the negative consequences of agonistic interactions. To evaluate whether established dominance relationships reduce aggressive encounters among males during the mating season, we studied aggressive behaviour in lekking male great bustards, Otis tarda. This sexually dimorphic bird species is potentially subject to strong sexual selection operating through intramale competition. The strongly skewed mating success of males is mainly determined by their age and weight, which are reliably signalled through plumage traits. We observed that adult males lived in stable groups at traditional leks to which they remained faithful throughout their lives, a prerequisite for the establishment of stable dominance hierarchies. Males substantially reduced aggressive interactions during the mating period. Males involved in more aggressive interactions during the premating period had weakly expressed sexual traits and low courtship success, which suggests the existence of an age- and possibly also weight-determined lek hierarchy. This is supported by the increase with age in a male’s dominance index, and the absence of aggressive interactions at advanced ages. During the mating period, older males and those with higher courtship success were involved in fewer aggressive encounters, suggesting that other males respected their status. Subdominant males disrupted other males’ copulation attempts, perhaps to reduce their success or to gain copulations themselves. Our study supports the hypotheses that social dominance is largely age determined in the great bustard and that established dominance relationships help reduce intramale aggression during the mating period.

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Juan Carlos Alonso

Spanish National Research Council

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Carlos A. Martín

Spanish National Research Council

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Marina Magaña

Spanish National Research Council

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Beatriz Martín

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Javier A. Alonso

Complutense University of Madrid

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Juan C. Alonso López

Spanish National Research Council

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Carlos Ponce

Spanish National Research Council

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Carolina Bravo

Spanish National Research Council

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Borja Milá

Spanish National Research Council

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