加州西莫哈韦沙漠羚羊谷的斯温森鹰筑巢数量

Q4 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Western Birds Pub Date : 2023-02-01 DOI:10.21199/wb54.1.3
P. Bloom, Rainey G. Barton, Michael J. Kuehn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

斯温森鹰(Buteo swainsoni)在加州有着悠久的繁殖历史,但1979年发现全州范围内的繁殖数量严重下降,当时在整个南加州只发现了两对,其中一对在莫哈韦沙漠西部的羚羊谷。直到1997年我们开始将斯温森老鹰队带到那里之前,人们对这个地区的研究很少。从1979年到2022年的20多个繁殖季节,我们在羚羊谷记录了124次筑巢尝试,平均窝仔数和窝仔数分别为2.49和2.37。从2004年到2006年,我们每年观察到两到四个繁殖对;从2009年到2022年,有3到14对繁殖对。91个巢穴的成功率被重新审视,以确定是否有羽翼丰满的雏鸟达到64%。巢树中非本土树种占81.5%,本土树种占13.7%,其中包括约书亚树(Yucca brevifolia),未知落叶树种占4.8%。1997年至2022年间,我们在50个巢穴中记录了170种脊椎动物的猎物,其中90种是地鼠。尽管羚羊谷的数量自1980年以来一直在增长,但它们筑巢和觅食的栖息地现在面临着多重威胁。为了保护被占领的筑巢区,我们建议在现有保护区附近建立筑巢和觅食栖息地保护区,包括原生沙漠和栽培苜蓿。
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Swainson’s Hawk Nesting Population in the Antelope Valley of the Western Mojave Desert, California
The Swainson’s Hawk (Buteo swainsoni) has a long history of breeding in California, but a severe decline in the statewide breeding population was identified in 1979, when in all of southern California only two pairs were found, one in the Antelope Valley of the western Mojave Desert. That area was little studied until we began banding Swainson’s Hawks there in 1997. Over 20 breeding seasons between 1979 and 2022, we documented in the Antelope Valley 124 attempts to nest, in which the mean clutch and brood sizes were 2.49 and 2.37, respectively. From 2004 through 2006, we observed two to four breeding pairs annually; from 2009 through 2022, three to 14 breeding pairs. The rate of success of the 91 nests revisited to determine if any young fledged was 64%. Nest trees consisted of 81.5% non-native species, 13.7% native species, including Joshua trees (Yucca brevifolia), and 4.8% unidentified deciduous trees. Between 1997 and 2022, in 50 nests, we recorded 170 vertebrate prey items, of which 90 were gophers (Thomomys bottae). Though the Antelope Valley population has grown since 1980, its nesting and foraging habitat now face multiple threats. To conserve occupied nesting territories, we recommend creation of nesting and foraging habitat reserves that include both native desert and cultivated alfalfa close to existing conserved land.
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Western Birds
Western Birds Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
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