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Survival and habitat use by post-fledging forest-nesting songbirds in managed mixed northern hardwood-coniferous forests

Posted on:2011-01-22Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of MinnesotaCandidate:Streby, Henry MichaelFull Text:PDF
GTID:1440390002955026Subject:Agriculture
Abstract/Summary:
Until recently, studies of breeding migratory songbirds have been primarily limited to the nesting season. Therefore, there is very little information about songbird survival and habitat use during the post-fledging period (i.e. the time between nesting and fall migration) available to those making management decisions. I expanded on the traditional nest-monitoring study and used radio telemetry to monitor survival and habitat use of fledgling songbirds in managed northern hardwood-coniferous forests of northern-Minnesota. In addition, I used mist-nets to sample use of early-successional forest stands (regenerating clearcuts) and forested wetlands by mature forest-nesting birds during the post-fledging period. I found that many assumptions of songbird nesting studies are unreliable, including the common assumption that the presence of a family group is confirmation of a successful nest in an occupied territory. In addition, I found that annual fledgling survival can vary considerably, and does not vary consistently with nest productivity, a finding with broad implications for models of songbird population growth. Furthermore, I found that habitat used by birds during the post-fledging period can be considerably different than that used for nesting, and that post-fledging habitat use can affect fledgling survival. In addition, I found that factors commonly affecting nest productivity (e.g. edge effects) can affect fledgling survival differently. From mist-netting, I found that many mature-forest birds used non-nesting cover types during the post-fledgling period, but most of that use was by only a few species, and hatch-year birds rarely used non-nesting cover types before independence from adult care. Models of capture rates in non-nesting cover types indicated that use of non-nesting cover types by mature-forest birds was primarily related to food availability and secondarily to cover in the form of relatively dense vegetation. My results indicated that nearly every conclusion made about breeding population ecology of mature-forest birds based only on nesting data was contradicted by data from the post-fledging period. My results clearly demonstrate that data from the entire breeding season (nesting and post-fledging) are necessary to understand songbird seasonal productivity and habitat associations.
Keywords/Search Tags:Nesting, Songbird, Post-fledging, Birds, Habitat, Survival, Breeding
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