Jr. Joseph M. Wunderle, Michael E. Akresh, Dave Currie, Javier E. Mercado, Eileen H. Helmer, David N. Ewert
{"title":"影响巴哈马埃卢瑟拉岛非繁殖期柯特兰莺家园范围大小和重叠的因素","authors":"Jr. Joseph M. Wunderle, Michael E. Akresh, Dave Currie, Javier E. Mercado, Eileen H. Helmer, David N. Ewert","doi":"10.5751/ace-02709-190209","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Knowledge of space use provides insight into a species’ habitat requirements needed for conservation. Little is known about space use of the near threatened Kirtland’s Warbler (<em>Setophaga kirtlandii</em>) wintering in The Bahamas, and how the warbler’s home range size and core area overlap among individuals and vary with sex and age, food availability, winter season, and habitat characteristics. To address these knowledge gaps, we used radio telemetry to determine sedentary home range size (95% adaptive kernel), core area (50% AK), and overlap for 27 radio-tagged warblers during two winters on Eleuthera, The Bahamas. Warblers monitored for ~3 weeks each had a median sedentary home range of 8.87 ha (range: 0.53–118.50 ha) and a median core area of 1.04 ha (range: 0.05–12.69 ha). Foliage of the warbler’s principal fruit species (<em>Lantana involucrata, Erithalis fruticosa, Chiococca alba</em>) was present in more warbler core area plots than in outlier plots (telemetry fix points outside the 95% AK home range) or in random plots within the landscape. Both size of home range and core areas increased with site disturbance age – consistent with declines in fruit abundance associated with age of vegetation. Warbler core areas displayed little pairwise overlap in two sites, “RS” and “MR,” examined during October–December (RS, x̄ = 1.49%; MR, x̄ = 0.55%) and at a site in January–February (MR, x̄ = 3.32%), indicating areas of exclusive use or territoriality. In contrast, a fruit-rich site (“OH”) in March–April had higher pairwise overlap in core areas (OH, x̄ = 8.56%), which may have resulted in competition for fruit. Our findings re-emphasize the importance of conservation at a landscape scale if spatiotemporal variation in food resources increases or become more concentrated prior to migration with extreme weather due to global climate change.</p>\n<p>The post Factors influencing home range size and overlap in nonbreeding Kirtland’s Warblers on Eleuthera, The Bahamas first appeared on Avian Conservation and Ecology.</p>","PeriodicalId":49233,"journal":{"name":"Avian Conservation and Ecology","volume":"11 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Factors influencing home range size and overlap in nonbreeding Kirtland’s Warblers on Eleuthera, The Bahamas\",\"authors\":\"Jr. Joseph M. Wunderle, Michael E. Akresh, Dave Currie, Javier E. Mercado, Eileen H. Helmer, David N. Ewert\",\"doi\":\"10.5751/ace-02709-190209\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Knowledge of space use provides insight into a species’ habitat requirements needed for conservation. Little is known about space use of the near threatened Kirtland’s Warbler (<em>Setophaga kirtlandii</em>) wintering in The Bahamas, and how the warbler’s home range size and core area overlap among individuals and vary with sex and age, food availability, winter season, and habitat characteristics. To address these knowledge gaps, we used radio telemetry to determine sedentary home range size (95% adaptive kernel), core area (50% AK), and overlap for 27 radio-tagged warblers during two winters on Eleuthera, The Bahamas. Warblers monitored for ~3 weeks each had a median sedentary home range of 8.87 ha (range: 0.53–118.50 ha) and a median core area of 1.04 ha (range: 0.05–12.69 ha). Foliage of the warbler’s principal fruit species (<em>Lantana involucrata, Erithalis fruticosa, Chiococca alba</em>) was present in more warbler core area plots than in outlier plots (telemetry fix points outside the 95% AK home range) or in random plots within the landscape. Both size of home range and core areas increased with site disturbance age – consistent with declines in fruit abundance associated with age of vegetation. Warbler core areas displayed little pairwise overlap in two sites, “RS” and “MR,” examined during October–December (RS, x̄ = 1.49%; MR, x̄ = 0.55%) and at a site in January–February (MR, x̄ = 3.32%), indicating areas of exclusive use or territoriality. In contrast, a fruit-rich site (“OH”) in March–April had higher pairwise overlap in core areas (OH, x̄ = 8.56%), which may have resulted in competition for fruit. 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Factors influencing home range size and overlap in nonbreeding Kirtland’s Warblers on Eleuthera, The Bahamas
Knowledge of space use provides insight into a species’ habitat requirements needed for conservation. Little is known about space use of the near threatened Kirtland’s Warbler (Setophaga kirtlandii) wintering in The Bahamas, and how the warbler’s home range size and core area overlap among individuals and vary with sex and age, food availability, winter season, and habitat characteristics. To address these knowledge gaps, we used radio telemetry to determine sedentary home range size (95% adaptive kernel), core area (50% AK), and overlap for 27 radio-tagged warblers during two winters on Eleuthera, The Bahamas. Warblers monitored for ~3 weeks each had a median sedentary home range of 8.87 ha (range: 0.53–118.50 ha) and a median core area of 1.04 ha (range: 0.05–12.69 ha). Foliage of the warbler’s principal fruit species (Lantana involucrata, Erithalis fruticosa, Chiococca alba) was present in more warbler core area plots than in outlier plots (telemetry fix points outside the 95% AK home range) or in random plots within the landscape. Both size of home range and core areas increased with site disturbance age – consistent with declines in fruit abundance associated with age of vegetation. Warbler core areas displayed little pairwise overlap in two sites, “RS” and “MR,” examined during October–December (RS, x̄ = 1.49%; MR, x̄ = 0.55%) and at a site in January–February (MR, x̄ = 3.32%), indicating areas of exclusive use or territoriality. In contrast, a fruit-rich site (“OH”) in March–April had higher pairwise overlap in core areas (OH, x̄ = 8.56%), which may have resulted in competition for fruit. Our findings re-emphasize the importance of conservation at a landscape scale if spatiotemporal variation in food resources increases or become more concentrated prior to migration with extreme weather due to global climate change.
The post Factors influencing home range size and overlap in nonbreeding Kirtland’s Warblers on Eleuthera, The Bahamas first appeared on Avian Conservation and Ecology.
期刊介绍:
Avian Conservation and Ecology is an open-access, fully electronic scientific journal, sponsored by the Society of Canadian Ornithologists and Birds Canada. We publish papers that are scientifically rigorous and relevant to the bird conservation community in a cost-effective electronic approach that makes them freely available to scientists and the public in real-time. ACE is a fully indexed ISSN journal that welcomes contributions from scientists all over the world.
While the name of the journal implies a publication niche of conservation AND ecology, we think the theme of conservation THROUGH ecology provides a better sense of our purpose. As such, we are particularly interested in contributions that use a scientifically sound and rigorous approach to the achievement of avian conservation as revealed through insights into ecological principles and processes. Papers are expected to fall along a continuum of pure conservation and management at one end to more pure ecology at the other but our emphasis will be on those contributions with direct relevance to conservation objectives.