emily silverman & kimberly hall territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds:...

8
Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

Post on 22-Dec-2015

224 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall

Territory size and establishment in breeding

forest songbirds:

Implications for forest management and

conservation

Page 2: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

Project objectives

• Develop accurate quantitative methods to measure the size and boundaries of breeding territories

• Investigate factors affecting the relationship between micro-habitat features, territoriality, and breeding densities

Page 3: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

Isoclines of breeding neotropical migrant diversity Source: Price 1995Source: Price et al. 1995

Species richness of breeding neotropical migrant songbirds

Page 4: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation
Page 5: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

Lightly-browsed Heavily-browsed

Thinned hardwoods in the Hiawatha National Forest

Page 6: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

40% firs 1.5 m hgt

Warbler use

Yrs 0 1 2 3 4

Understory vegetation

Page 7: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

1300 m

Observationsof singing males 1999

Page 8: Emily Silverman & Kimberly Hall Territory size and establishment in breeding forest songbirds: Implications for forest management and conservation

Methods

• Simulation model of bird movement & sampling strategies

• Territory mapping of 3 species with different patterns of micro-habitat use

• Vegetation mapping and measurement

• Observation of timing and location of spring arrivals