Romanov, A. A., Koblik, E. A., Smirnov, P. A., Vinogradov, A. A., Red'kin, Ya. A., and Zhigir, D. R.
The ecological patterns of the formation of the avifauna and bird populations on Iturup Island have been analyzed. Route censuses were used along transects with unlimited width. As many as 116 bird species have been registered; 36% of them are ubiquitous, 34% are local, and the other 26% are highly local. Seventy-one species were shown to nest. The taxonomic structure of the avifauna, represented by species from 15 orders, corresponded to the zonal and landscape features of the island areas located at the eastern margins of northern Eurasia. Passeriformes (37%), Charadriiformes (22%), Anseriformes (9%), and Procellariiformes (8%) prevailed. The zoogeographic peculiarity of the local avifauna was the combination of elements of the Far East island, Pacific, Siberian, and Chinese faunal complexes, some Siberian–American and widespread species, and Japanese island endemics. The avifauna around Iturup Island, formed by a system of general zonal-landscape and altitudinal-belt patterns, combines the ecological groups of marine and terrestrial species, including mountain ones (n = 9). The local avifauna includes 41 species in coastal marine habitats vs. 55 species in forests, 37 species in light forests, and 46 species in tall grasses, with the population density being 607, 785, 968, and 518 individuals/km2, respectively. The similarity coefficients were 19–48% for the populations of forest habitats vs. 22% for light forests and 20–37% for tall grasses, while they were 21–52% for the sea coast and adjacent water areas. The populations of terrestrial habitats are dominated by the oriental turtle-dove, Pacific swift, Siberian rubythroat, Japanese bush-warbler, marsh tit, coal tit, Eurasian nutcracker, oriental greenfinch, Eurasian siskin, long-tailed rosefinch, masked bunting, and gray bunting. The populations of the coast and adjacent sea area are dominated by Temminck's cormorant, the rufous-necked stint, slaty-backed gull, black-tailed gull, and black-backed wagtail. In open sea areas, the most common species are the white-winged scoter, black-footed and Laysan albatrosses, northern fulmar, and short-tailed shearwater. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]