MEIJER R & WEEL B (2007) Breeding birds of the Biesbosch National Park. LIMOSA 80 (4): 139-152.
Until 2 November 1970, the Biesbosch was a fresh water
tidal area in the SW Netherlands. During almost 550
years it was shaped by the rivers Meuse and Rhine and
by people who harvested osiers, reed and rushes. Parts
of the area that had silted up high enough were
dammed and changed into polders with grassland and
arable land. Until 1970 most of the area was inundated
twice a day, making it impossible for birds to nest near
the ground. Almost all reed beds were cut every winter,
limiting possibilities to breed for birds preferring old
reed. As tall trees were rare, woodland birds like Blackcap
Sylvia atricapilla and Great Spotted Woodpecker
Dendrocopus major were scarce. As a consequence the
Biesbosch was rather poor in both species and numbers
of breeding birds. The specialities of those days were a
colony of Black-crowned Night Herons Nycticorax nycticorax,
50-100 Corn Crakes Crex crex and many hundreds,
maybe up to 1000, Great Reed Warblers Acrocephalus
arundinaceus.
When the Haringvliet sluices were closed in 1970, the
tides almost disappeared in the south-western part
(from c. 1.8 m to 0.3 m) and halved in the north-eastern
part of the Biesbosch (from 1.4 m to 0.7 m). The reed
beds dried out and within a few years changed into fields
of nettles and other high herbs, while Willow Salix spp.
and Elder Sambucus nigra established themselves. As
transportation of osiers became impossible the exploitation
of almost all holms came to an end and they
changed into Willow woods. Three large polders were
changed into drinking water basins (Fig. 1). To prevent
flooding of the surrounding densely inhabited areas, a
total of 2,100 ha of arable land is renaturated.
All these changes had an enormous impact on breeding
bird populations. The number of breeding species increased
(Fig. 2, Table 1, 2) and a total of 154 species are
now known to have bred in the area; almost two thirds of
all species breeding in the Netherlands. The number of
species breeding in any one year increased from 85 to
115. The total number of pairs/territories doubled (Fig. 3).
Nowadays, woodland birds dominate the species top-10,
whereas around 1970 the list was more mixed (Table 3).
The consequences of the succession from holms to
Willow woods are demonstrated for three species (Fig. 4):
Great Spotted Woodpecker (strong increase followed by
a sharp decline due to loss of many trees in a severe
storm), Willow Tit Parus montanus (loss when holms disappeared,
profit from dying trees and a sharp decline
when dead trees were covered with a blanket of climbing
herbs) and Blackcap (very strong increase). Many
woodland birds show similar patterns. The main losers
are the red-listed Icterine Warbler Hippolais icterina and
Common Linnet Carduelis cannabina; both did better in
the holms. European Turtle Dove Streptopelia turtur and
Eurasian Golden Oriole Oriolus oriolus also declined, but
the causes of these losses probably lie outside the area.
The consequences of the change from reed beds to
fields with high herbs are more mixed (Fig. 4). True reed
breeders like the Common Reed Bunting Emberiza
schoeniclus and Common Reed Warbler Acrocephalus
scirpaceus sharply declined at first, but remained rather
stable during the last 20 years. Great Reed Warbler nowis
a rare species. Linnet increased thanks to the new shrubs
of Willow and Elder, showed a very sharp decline after
three severe winters in the early 1980s and never recovered
as those shrubs grew too high. All birds preferring a
vegetation of high herbs mixed with shrubs increased.
Examples are the red-listed Common Nightingale
Luscinia megarhynchos and Savi's Warbler Locustella luscinioides,
and Common Grasshopper Warbler Locustella
naevia.
This paper only gives a necessarily condensed impression
of the changes during the last decennia. Until the
Haringvliet sluices will be partly opened again around
2015 the question remains what the Biesbosch would
have looked like nowadays if the tides would have remained
and the intensive exploitation would have
ceased in 1970.
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