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Ecology of the California spotted owl: Breeding dispersal and associations with forest stand characteristics in northeastern California

Posted on:2004-12-20Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Colorado State UniversityCandidate:Blakesley, Jennifer AnnFull Text:PDF
GTID:1463390011977377Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
The California spotted owl (Strix occidentalis occidentalis) inhabits coniferous and hardwood forest in California and selects stands dominated by large trees with moderate-high canopy cover for roosting and nesting. This study examined the demographic response of spotted owls to cover type composition within owl territories. Site occupancy was positively associated with the amount of the nest area dominated by large trees and high canopy cover within the nest area, and negatively associated with the amount of non-habitat and the amount of area dominated by medium-sized trees with high canopy cover. Furthermore, site occupancy decreased over time and with increasing elevation. Apparent survival probability varied annually and was positively related to the area of each cover type multiplied by the quotient proportion used/proportion available for each type, at both the nest and core scales. Reproductive output was negatively related to elevation and non-habitat within the nest area. Nest success was positively associated with the presence of large remnant trees within the nest stand. These findings reveal that although the California spotted owl is found in a variety of forest stand types, site occupancy, apparent survival and nesting success were all enhanced by increased amounts of forest cover types known to be selected by the owl at the landscape scale. Reproductive output decreased with increasing amount of non-habitat.;Spotted owls are territorial, generally non-migratory, and strongly philopatric. Nevertheless, California spotted owls exhibited breeding dispersal during 7% of between-year observations of banded individuals (n = 54 of 743 occasions). Median breeding dispersal distance was 7 km (range = 1--33). Breeding dispersal probability was higher for paired owls which lost their mates, single owls, owls at lower quality sites, younger owls, and owls which failed to reproduce in the year preceding dispersal. To a lesser extent, dispersal probability was higher for males than females. I found no strong relationships between dispersal distance and any of the conditions that were associated with dispersal probability. Dispersal resulted in improved territory quality in 72% of cases. Single owls and those which lost their mates were usually paired following dispersal.
Keywords/Search Tags:California spotted owl, Dispersal, Forest, Stand
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