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Post-nestling mortality and dispersal in Blackbirds and Song ThrushesHill, Ian Franklin January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Ecology and conservation of the Såli (Micronesian Starling, Aplonis opaca) in the presence of the invasive Brown Treesnake (Boiga irregularis) in Guam, Mariana IslandsKastner, Martin 21 October 2024 (has links)
The world's islands are of singular importance from a conservation perspective because they hold a disproportionate share of global biodiversity. However, island ecosystems are fragile, and the introduction of invasive species poses an especially grave threat to their species. My research took place on the island of Guam, which has been particularly hard hit by invasive species in recent history. The introduction of the invasive Brown Treesnake (BTS; Boiga irregularis) to Guam in the mid-20th century caused the extinction of the vast majority of its avifauna. Of the remaining bird species, the native Såli (Aplonis opaca) is a forest starling now limited to breeding and roosting in certain urbanized areas on the island. Previous research has shown that although Såli adults appear to have high survival, their fledglings are highly vulnerable to predators. My research focused on refining our understanding of how BTS are impacting Såli ecology and survival, and how BTS management can benefit Såli conservation. In my first chapter, I conducted the first field study to investigate the influence of both prey and predator sizes on the frequency of ingestion success by snakes. I found that nearly half of ingestion attempts by BTS on fledgling Såli were unsuccessful, and that BTS routinely pushed the upper limits of their capacity to swallow prey. These results suggest that relatively small BTS pose a greater predation risk to birds than previously recognized, and broaden the size range of BTS that should be targeted in management efforts for avian conservation. In my second chapter, I investigated a potential life-history trade-off for Såli between the proximity of nest sites to foraging areas and the risk of fledgling predation by BTS. I found that Såli nesting closer to the forest make more yearly nesting attempts, but that fledgling survival was higher the farther their nest site was from the forest. Såli therefore balance potential fecundity with predation risk to fledglings in their selection of nest sites. In my third chapter, I examined the survival response of fledgling Såli to the suppression of BTS. I found that snake control did not lead to a change in fledgling survival from the pre-treatment baseline or in comparison to areas where snakes were not controlled, and that there was no shift from snake predation to other causes of mortality. Changes to the strategies or tools employed will therefore be required in order for future BTS control efforts within similar habitats to effectively improve avian survival. This body of work demonstrates that BTS are affecting Såli in unexpected ways, and offers new guidance on how to manage damaging invasive species for native species conservation. / Doctor of Philosophy / Islands are of high value important for conservation because they hold a more than their share of the world's animal and plant species. However, island ecosystems are fragile, and the introduction of damaging exotic species is especially threatening to species that live there. My research took place on the island of Guam, which has been particularly hard hit by damaging non-native species in recent history. The introduction of the Brown Treesnake (BTS; Boiga irregularis) to Guam in the mid-20th century caused the extinction of the vast majority of its bird species. Of the remaining bird species, the native Såli (Aplonis opaca) is now limited to breeding and roosting in certain developed areas on the island. Previous research has shown that although Såli adults appear to have high survival, their fledglings (young birds that recently left the nest) are highly vulnerable to predators. My research focused on refining our understanding of how BTS are impacting Såli life cycles, and how BTS management can benefit Såli conservation. In my first chapter, I conducted the first field study to investigate the influence of both prey and predator sizes on the capacity for snakes to swallow their prey. I found that nearly half of attempts by BTS to swallow fledgling Såli were unsuccessful, and that BTS routinely pushed the upper limits of their capacity to swallow prey. These results suggest that relatively small BTS pose a greater predation risk to birds than previously recognized, and broaden the size range of BTS that should be targeted in management efforts for avian conservation. In my second chapter, I investigated a potential life-history trade-off for Såli between how close their nest sites are to foraging areas and the risk of fledglings being killed by BTS. I found that Såli nesting closer to the forest make more nesting attempts per year, but that fledgling survival was higher the farther their nest site was from the forest. Såli therefore balance the potential number of young they can raise with the predation risk to those same young in their choice of nest sites. In my third chapter, I examined whether the suppression of BTS led to a change in the survival of fledgling Såli. I found that snake control did not lead to a change in fledgling survival from the period before the treatment or in comparison to areas where snakes were not controlled, and that there was no shift from snake predation to other causes of death. Changes to the strategies or tools employed will therefore be required in order for future BTS control efforts within similar habitats to effectively improve avian survival. This body of work demonstrates that BTS are affecting Såli in unexpected ways, and offers new guidance on how to manage damaging invasive species for native species conservation.
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Parental care in northern flickers: sex-related patterns of foraging, provisioning, and habitat use2014 February 1900 (has links)
The sexes have different life histories that can influence their parental care strategies. I studied northern flicker, Colaptes auratus, parents and simultaneously radio-tracked mates during the nestling and post-fledging periods. I tested hypotheses about sex differences in parental care strategies by examining foraging patterns, provisioning effort and habitat use. Males and females used the same microhabitats, but avoided overlap of their foraging areas on the home range consistent with the hypothesis that mates separate the home range to reduce competition. During temporary (i.e., 24 hr) brood size manipulations, both parents decreased provisioning to reduced broods, but did not increase provisioning to enlarged broods or alter their foraging pattern on the landscape. I suggest flickers were energy limited and were incapable or unwilling to respond to increased brood demands. During the post-fledging period, males spent more time near their fledglings, and cared for their fledglings longer than females (16 days versus 12 days, respectively). Approximately 36% of females abandoned their brood in the post-fledging period and females with high levels of feather corticosterone were more likely to abandon. Older males and those with high provisioning rates in the nestling period fed their fledglings longer. Nearly 45% of fledglings died within the first week after leaving the nest, but survival was higher for fledglings with intermediate body mass and those that occupied areas of dense cover. Families moved a greater distance from the nest during the first 4 days post-fledging when there was less tree cover within 250 m of the nest site. Parents brought fledglings to areas with dense vegetation within the first week post-fledging, but subsequently shifted to open grassland habitats. My results show that parents invest in their offspring indirectly by taking them to habitats that increase survival. This research stresses the importance of studying parental care during the post-fledging period to gain a more complete understanding of the total parental investment of males versus females and how each sex may react differently to trade-offs between investing in the current brood versus self-maintenance.
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Effects of Habitat, Nest-site Selection, and Adult Behavior on Black-capped Vireo Nest and Fledgling SurvivalPope, Theresa 2011 August 1900 (has links)
Many factors affect the productivity of songbirds. Which vegetation types the birds inhabit, nest-site characteristics, and adult behavior at the nest may affect predation and parasitism frequencies, fecundity, and nest survival and fledgling survival. All of these metrics determine reproductive success of individuals and may influence population persistence, especially for threatened and endangered species. My research investigated factors that affected these metrics for endangered black-capped vireos (Vireo atricapilla). Shrubland is considered high quality vireo habitat, with woodland vegetation types considered marginal. I located and monitored nests, conducted nest behavior observations, recorded behavior and predation at nests using video cameras, and resighted fledglings in shrubland, oak-juniper woodland, and deciduous woodland during the 2008–2010 breeding seasons.
I monitored 302 black-capped vireo nests in 259 territories and resighted 350 fledglings with unique color combinations. Apparent nest success, nest survival, success of first nest attempts, parasitism and predation frequency, and fecundity did not differ statistically among vegetation types. Parasitism frequency was nearly twice as high in shrubland (22 percent) than in either woodland (12 percent in each) and varied by year. Nest-site characteristics differed among vegetation types, but nest survival was affected only by nest height and year; nests placed higher from the ground and nest attempts in 2008 and 2009 had lower survival. Fledgling survival was not affected by vegetation type or proximity of the nest to oak-juniper woodland. Nest behavior was not affected by vegetation characteristics, though nest attentiveness during incubation increased as average cover from 0 to 2 m increased. Females spent 80 percent more time on nests during incubation and 250 percent more time on nests during the nestling stage than males, but visitation was similar for each sex. Overall, the probability of nest success improved as male participation increased.
My results emphasize the importance of male participation in determining the outcome of nests for species exhibiting bi-parental care. Furthermore, woodland habitats previously considered marginal may be good quality habitat in areas with large populations of black-capped vireos. Recognizing woodlands as non-typical, yet still suitable, habitat will allow managers to incorporate these vegetation types into management plans and recommendations for landowner conservation incentive programs.
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Polluting The Senses: The Impact Of Noise And Light Pollution On Fledgling Movement And Evolution Within The Avian EyeMackinlay, Margaret C 01 December 2023 (has links) (PDF)
There is more human-generated noise and light today than ever before, a trend tied to ongoing urbanization and with reverberating impacts on a wide range of organisms. While research on these impacts is mounting and particularly plentiful when it comes to birds, there is still much to explore within its effects on avian behavior, fitness, and evolution. In chapter 1, we investigated how fledgling movement is influenced by noise and light pollution. While adult birds have well-documented species-specific responses to these stimuli, fledglings are sorely understudied in this context. We experimentally manipulated light levels and took advantage of an existing landscape of artificial noise in the gas fields of northwestern New Mexico to radio track fledglings through gradients of noise and light from four species: Western bluebirds (Sialia mexicana), mountain bluebirds (Sialia currucoides), ash-throated flycatchers (Myiarchus cinerascens), and gray flycatchers (Empidonax wrightii). Step-selection functions assessing resource selection and generalized additive models assessing step length, step velocity, and distance from nest showed no influence of noise and light pollution on fledgling movement, but did show that ash-throated flycatchers moved further each day and further from the nest than gray flycatchers. Our results also revealed the novel pattern of fledglings moving away from the nest through day 10 of the radio tracking period, but moving back towards it after day 20. While we did not find positive results for our primary question, these observations of fledgling movement are valuable given how little we know about this vulnerable life stage.
In chapter 2, we investigated whether dim light vision and its corresponding bony structures within the eye could be under selection with the proliferation of artificial light, given that variation in avian responses to light pollution was recently linked to the quality of a bird's dim light vision. We used museum specimens of six urban adapted species collected across 100+ years and light pollution proxies in the form of collection year and urban density to test two alternative hypotheses. Under the protection hypothesis, selection should drive evolution of poorer dim light vision with higher light pollution exposure, decreasing fitness cost borne via the hormone and circadian rhythm dysregulation associated with retinal-received light pollution. Under the temporal niche shift hypothesis, prolonged foraging opportunities made accessible to birds that can better detect light in artificially lit conditions should drive evolution of improved dim light vision with light pollution exposure. We found that dim light vision improved with collection year for great horned owls (Bubo virginianus) while the opposite was true for red-tailed hawks (Buteo jamaicensis); surprisingly, house sparrows (Passer domesticus) and American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) showed support for both hypotheses within single species, exhibiting different directionality in dim light vision patterns for different light pollution proxies. Our results suggest that light pollution may represent a contemporary selective agent for avian vision, but that the directionality may depend on ecological context. More broadly, our findings suggest that quantifying animal perceptual abilities may be important for understanding inter-specific responses to an increasingly bright world.
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Patterns in the Parables: Black Female Agency and Octavia Butler's Construction of Black WomanhoodWilliams, Algie Vincent January 2011 (has links)
This project argues that Octavia's Butler's construction of the black woman characters is unique within the pantheon of late eighties African-American writers primarily through Butler's celebration of black female physicality and the agency the black body provides. The project is divided into five sections beginning with an intensive examination of Butler's ur-character, Anyanwu. This character is vitally important in discussing Butler's canon because she embodies the attributes and thematic issues that run throughout the author's work, specifically, the author's argument that black woman are provided opportunity through their bodies. Chapter two addresses the way black women's femininity is judged: their sexual activity. In this chapter, I explore one facet of Octavia Butler's narrative examination of sexual co-option and her subsequent implied challenge to definitions of feminine morality through the character Lilith who appears throughout Butler's Xenogenesis trilogy. Specifically, I explore this subject using Harriet Jacobs' seminal autobiography and slave narrative, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl as the prism in which I historically focus the conversation. In chapter three, I move the discussion into an exploration of black motherhood. Much like the aforementioned challenge to femininity vis-à-vis sexual morality, Octavia Butler often challenges and interrogates the traditional definition of motherhood, specifically, the relationship between mother and daughter. I will focus on different aspects of that mother/daughter relationship in two series, the Patternist sequence, which includes, in chronological order, Wild Seed, Mind of my Mind and Patternmaster. Chapter four discusses Butler's final novel, Fledgling, and how the novel's protagonist, Shori not only fits into the matrix of Butler characters but represents the culmination of the privileging of black female physicality that I observe in the author's entire canon. Specifically, while earlier characters are shown to create opportunities and venues of agency through their bodies, in Shori, Butler posits a character whose existence is predicated on its blackness and discusses how that purposeful racial construction leads to freedom. / English
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Annual Cycle Demography, Habitat Associations, and Migration Ecology in Red-headed Woodpeckers (Melanerpes erythrocephalus)Pagel, Robert Kyle, III 29 August 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Post-fledging Ecology of Two Songbird Species Across a Rural-to-Urban Landscape GradientAusprey, Ian J. 15 September 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Post-fledging and Migration Ecology of Gray Vireos (<i>Vireo vicinior</i>) and Using ArtScience to Explore Gender and IdentityFischer, Silas E. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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