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Ecology of the Cerulean warbler in the Cumberland Mountains of east Tennessee

Posted on:2005-01-22Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of TennesseeCandidate:Nicholson, Charles PatrickFull Text:PDF
GTID:1450390008478219Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
The objective of this study was to describe the distribution, local breeding densities and population trends, breeding biology, and habitat selection of the Cerulean Warbler (Dendroica cerulea) in the Cumberland Mountains of Tennessee. The Cerulean Warbler was detected at 50% of point counts at six study sites and was the sixth most frequently encountered bird. Spot-map censuses were conducted on five plots at three study sites. Cerulean Warblers occurred on all census plots at an average density of 84.9 pairs/100 ha. Average density on individual plots ranged from 21.3 to 137.6 pairs/100 ha. There was an overall declining population trend during the late 1990s.; The warbler's breeding biology was studied at 52 nests. Female warblers built nests, incubated eggs, and brooded nestlings. Females fed nestlings more often than males; males and females removed fecal sacs from the nest at the same rate. Mean clutch size was 3.7 +/- 0.13 SE. For the years 1996--1999, nest success, measured by the Mayfield method, averaged 0.3708; the daily nest success rate averaged 0.9685 +/- 0.0057 SE. The major cause of nest failure appeared to be weather events, including presumed nestling starvation during unusually cool and wet weather.; Nests were built in 12 taxa of deciduous trees, most of which were selected in proportion to their availability. Nests averaged 15.9 m +/- 0.81 SE (range 7.0--36.3m) above ground. Nest trees averaged 23.6 m +/- 0.90 SE (range 10.2--42.2 m) tall and 39.6 cm +/- 2.53 SE (range 12.3--76.2 cm) in diameter at breast height.; Habitat characteristics were sampled at different scales. Basal area was consistently greater, and both shrub cover and canopy cover consistently less, at nest sites than at random sites, at territory sites than at random sites, and at nest sites than at territory sites. Point count locations where Cerulean Warblers were present had larger diameter live trees and more sapling cover than locations where the warbler was absent. Logistic regression models successfully classified over 70% of sites on census plots but were less successful in predicting Cerulean Warbler presence at point count locations.
Keywords/Search Tags:Cerulean warbler, Sites, Plots
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