We provide field monitoring data of a territorial raptor (the booted eagle, Hieraaetus pennatus ), that was intensively monitored over a period of 18 years (1998–2015) in a Mediterranean forested… Click to show full abstract
We provide field monitoring data of a territorial raptor (the booted eagle, Hieraaetus pennatus ), that was intensively monitored over a period of 18 years (1998–2015) in a Mediterranean forested area of south-eastern Spain designated as a Special Protection Area (Natura 2000 Network) for this species. The data set compiles all the relevant information about the occupation of territories and nests, reproductive ecology, long-term monitoring of marked individuals and influence of parent’s colour morph on brood size. Several questions concerning the population ecology of forest-dwelling raptors and factors conditioning territorial occupancy, such as location cues or site fidelity, are addressed. This type of long-term population monitoring has high potential for replication, reuse and comparison purposes, providing insights for monitoring other long-lived, territorial species. Measurement(s) Occupancy • reproduction • marked individuals • phenotypic annotation • color Technology Type(s) Sampling • visual observation method Factor Type(s) species • sex • territory • nest Sample Characteristic - Organism Hieraaetus pennatus • Buteo buteo • Accipiter gentilis Sample Characteristic - Environment mediterranean forest biome Sample Characteristic - Location Murcia Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12097776
               
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