The effects of habitat, weather, and raptors on northern bobwhite abundance at multiple spatial scales

IF 1.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY Journal of Wildlife Management Pub Date : 2024-05-27 DOI:10.1002/jwmg.22598
John T. Edwards, Fidel Hernández, David B. Wester, Leonard A. Brennan, Chad J. Parent, Robert M. Perez
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Abstract

Rangelands in the southwestern United States represent a current stronghold for northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus); however, bobwhite populations in rangelands exhibit extreme inter-annual variability in abundance in relation to fluctuating weather patterns. Recent declining bobwhite population trends within this region have led to the supposition that landscape-scale processes, such as habitat loss and fragmentation and predation from increased raptor abundance, may be acting in conjunction with weather to reduce bobwhite populations. Our objective was to determine the relative effects of these factors on bobwhite populations in the rangeland environments of Texas and Oklahoma, USA. We obtained publicly available datasets for bobwhite counts (Breeding Bird Survey, state-agency roadside counts), weather (PRISM), land cover (National Land Cover Database), and raptors (Christmas Bird Counts) for 3 5-year periods (1990–1994, 1999–2003, 2009–2013). Data were collected at route and landscape scales based on routes within the Rio Grande Plains region of Texas and the Central Mixed Grass Prairie region of Texas and Oklahoma. We used generalized linear mixed models with a backward selection approach to determine top models for each dataset based on scale and ecoregion. Covariate relationships with bobwhite abundance followed expected patterns, with positive relationships with habitat, precipitation, and minimum temperatures and negative relationships with maximum temperatures and raptor abundance. Weather variables were the factors most consistently selected within both regions, while minimum winter temperature was overall the top variable. These relationships occurred within a landscape still containing relatively vast amounts of unfragmented bobwhite habitat (>60% rangeland; >15 million ha). Management within these regions should be focused on retaining habitat at a broad scale, while managing for suitable cover at a local scale to help mitigate weather effects.

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栖息地、天气和猛禽在多种空间尺度上对北部山齿白数量的影响
美国西南部的牧场是北部山齿鹑(Colinus virginianus)目前的据点;然而,牧场中的山齿鹑种群在丰度上表现出极强的年际变化性,这与波动的天气模式有关。该地区最近出现的山齿白种群数量下降趋势使人们推测,栖息地丧失和破碎化以及猛禽数量增加造成的捕食等景观尺度过程可能与天气共同作用,导致山齿白种群数量减少。我们的目标是确定这些因素对美国得克萨斯州和俄克拉荷马州牧场环境中山白种群的相对影响。我们获得了可公开获取的数据集,包括1990-1994年、1999-2003年、2009-2013年这3个5年期间的山齿白计数(种鸟调查、州机构路边计数)、天气(PRISM)、土地覆盖(国家土地覆盖数据库)和猛禽(圣诞鸟计数)。我们根据得克萨斯州格兰德河平原地区以及得克萨斯州和俄克拉荷马州中部杂草草原地区的路线和景观尺度收集数据。我们使用广义线性混合模型和后向选择方法,根据尺度和生态区域确定每个数据集的顶级模型。与山齿白丰度相关的变量关系遵循预期模式,与栖息地、降水和最低气温呈正相关,与最高气温和猛禽丰度呈负相关。在这两个地区,天气变量是最常被选择的因素,而冬季最低气温则是最主要的变量。这些关系发生在仍包含相对大量未被分割的山齿白鸟栖息地(60%的牧场,1,500万公顷)的地貌中。这些地区的管理重点应该是在大范围内保留栖息地,同时在局部范围内管理合适的覆盖物,以帮助减轻天气影响。
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来源期刊
Journal of Wildlife Management
Journal of Wildlife Management 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
13.00%
发文量
188
审稿时长
9-24 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Wildlife Management publishes manuscripts containing information from original research that contributes to basic wildlife science. Suitable topics include investigations into the biology and ecology of wildlife and their habitats that has direct or indirect implications for wildlife management and conservation. This includes basic information on wildlife habitat use, reproduction, genetics, demographics, viability, predator-prey relationships, space-use, movements, behavior, and physiology; but within the context of contemporary management and conservation issues such that the knowledge may ultimately be useful to wildlife practitioners. Also considered are theoretical and conceptual aspects of wildlife science, including development of new approaches to quantitative analyses, modeling of wildlife populations and habitats, and other topics that are germane to advancing wildlife science. Limited reviews or meta analyses will be considered if they provide a meaningful new synthesis or perspective on an appropriate subject. Direct evaluation of management practices or policies should be sent to the Wildlife Society Bulletin, as should papers reporting new tools or techniques. However, papers that report new tools or techniques, or effects of management practices, within the context of a broader study investigating basic wildlife biology and ecology will be considered by The Journal of Wildlife Management. Book reviews of relevant topics in basic wildlife research and biology.
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